0000000000901548

AUTHOR

Eckhard Gottschalk

showing 2 related works from this author

Conservation of the Grey Bush Cricket Platycleis albopunctata (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae) Under Differing Habitat Conditions: Implications From an In…

2009

Assessing the chance of survival of any species is a great challenge in conservation biology. In this chapter, we analyse the vulnerability of the grey bush cricket Platycleis albopunctata in habitats of different food availability under current and increased temperature conditions applying an individual-based model. Our simulations show that populations in warmer habitats with a higher food limitation have a much lower extinction risk than those living in habitats that are less food-limited and colder. An increase in mortalities of life stages severely increases the risk of population extinction, whereas a shift in the termination of egg diapause towards the beginning of the year caused by…

0106 biological sciencesAbiotic componenteducation.field_of_studyExtinctionExtinction probabilityEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyPopulationTettigoniidae15. Life on landDiapauseBiologybiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHabitat14. Life underwaterConservation biologyeducation
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The influence of temperature model assumptions on the prognosis accuracy of extinction risk

2000

Abstract For a species whose abundance is well-known to correlate on the degree of heat different temperature model assumptions may affect the prognosis accuracy of persistence. Likewise, year-to-year autocorrelations in weather fluctuations are known to decrease extinction risk. Thus, we investigated the grey bush cricket Platycleis albopunctata . For this species is known that growth and reproduction is mainly influenced by temperature. We developed a stochastic individual based model for the bush cricket. This day–degree model described the demographic growth of the species that depends on temperature. Daily temperatures were generated by five different methods: (i) temperatures were seq…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyExtinction010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesStochastic modellingEcologyEcological ModelingPopulationAutocorrelation010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesDegree (temperature)Normal distribution13. Climate actionMinimum viable populationAbundance (ecology)Statisticseducation0105 earth and related environmental sciencesMathematicsEcological Modelling
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