Search results for " species"

showing 10 items of 2593 documents

Habitat type and island identity as drivers of community assembly in an archipelago

2020

Aim: Ecoinformatics offer new opportunity to test islands as biogeographic and eco- logical models. In this paper we predicted three hypotheses: (1) plot-based data issu- ing from vegetation surveys can be used to predict Island Species-Area Relationships (ISARs) or island similarity; (2) the habitat area is an independent predictor of species richness patterns within island; (3) species richness and composition are more de- pendent on habitat type than island identity in land-bridge islands. Area: Tuscan Archipelago, Italy. Methods: We assembled a database of all the vegetation plots available for the archi- pelago. For the first hypothesis we calculated ISARs, using Arrhenius model, and B…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiogeographic patterns islands plot data species-area relationshipsIdentity (social science)islandsPlant Sciencespecies-area relationshipsbiogeographic patternsType (biology)HabitatislandSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataArchipelagobiogeographic patternEthnologyplot data
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Yet another alien: a second species of Lepisiota spreading across the Canary Islands, Spain (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)

2018

The Canary Islands are a biologically important archipelago hosting many unique species, whose myrmecofauna is peculiarly rich in both endemic and introduced species. Lepisiota frauenfeldi cfr. kantarensis Forel, 1911 is reported for the first time from Fuerteventura and Tenerife. It is the second species of Lepisiota introduced in the archipelago in the last few years, and one of the few documented cases in which Lepisiota frauenfeldi (Mayr, 1855) s.l. acts as a successful tramp species. Comments are also given on taxonomic problems involving the L. frauenfeldi-group and related taxa. Finally, new additional information and comments are presented on the distribution of other alien ants spe…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyEcologyIntroduced speciesAlienbiology.organism_classificationLasius neglectusTaxonLepisiotaMacaronesia Lepisiota frauenfeldi ssp. kantarensis first record myrmecofauna exotic ants invasive ants tramp ants biodiversity conservationInsect ScienceArchipelagolcsh:ZoologyTaxonomy (biology)lcsh:QL1-991ParatrechinaEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Ecological variation between marginal and central populations of Potamogeton polygonifolius, a rare and endangered species in Central Europe

2012

Abstract The present study is focused on Potamogeton polygonifolius – the species considered to be endangered in Germany, the Czech Republic, Poland and Switzerland. Field studies were carried out in Lower Silesia and Lusatia in southwestern Poland in order to verify the present state of the marginal populations of P. polygonifolius, to determine the habitat preferences of the species in the study area, to compare the ecological data between marginal and central populations and finally to recognise the factors constraining the easternmost limit of the P. polygonifolius. In total, 18 populations were examined, and 11 releves were collected. The releves gathered were compared with 95 releves …

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyaquatic plantsRange (biology)Ecologybusiness.industryEndangered speciesconservationDistribution (economics)marginal populationMetapopulationbiology.organism_classificationPotamogeton polygonifoliusPotamogeton polygonifoliusHabitatAquatic plantrangedistributionecologybusinessBogNature and Landscape Conservation
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Changes in alpine snowbed-wetland vegetation over three decades in northern Norway

2013

We have quantified floristic changes in alpine snowbeds and wetland vegetation during three decades and analyzed to what extent these changes are related to initial variations in snow cover duration and distance to groundwater level. Vascular plant species richness and total plant cover were estimated along three transects in northern Norway. Three different vegetation zones were identified along the original transects: relatively dry snowbeds, wet snowbeds and wetlands. The resampling shows major changes in species richness and plant cover. In general, there was a net immigration of species and 13 new species were found. Five rare species with initial low cover were lost. In the dry and we…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyved/biologyRare speciesved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesfood and beveragesWetlandPlant ScienceVegetationBiologyShrubHabitatPlant coversense organsSpecies richnessTransectEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNordic Journal of Botany
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Conservation of threatened habitat types under future climate change – Lessons from plant-distribution models and current extinction trends in southe…

2015

A higher risk of future range losses as a result of climate change is expected to be one of the main drivers of extinction trends in vascular plants occurring in habitat types of high conservation value. Nevertheless, the impact of the climate changes of the last 60 years on the current distribution and extinction patterns of plants is still largely unclear. We applied species distribution models to study the impact of environmental variables (climate, soil conditions, land cover, topography), on the current distribution of 18 vascular plant species characteristic of three threatened habitat types in southern Germany: (i) xero-thermophilous vegetation, (ii) mesophilous mountain grasslands (…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryExtinctionEcologyHabitatEcologyThreatened speciesSpecies distributionClimate changeWetlandVegetationNature and Landscape ConservationExtinction debtJournal for Nature Conservation
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Global distribution of Fabaeformiscandona subacuta: an exotic invasive Ostracoda on the Iberian Peninsula?

2012

Although exotic species of Ostracoda have been recorded from various sites in Europe, none of them have a widespread European distribution. Reviews of existing literature, examination of specimens, and sampling in Spain and Japan has greatly expanded the known distribution of the candonid ostracode Fabaeformiscandona subacuta (Yang, 1982). We herein present new reports of its presence in mainland eastern Asia, Australia, and South America, and we review its distribution on the Iberian Peninsula. Although this species is globally widespread, we hypothesize that it is an invasive species on the Iberian Peninsula in light of the following facts: it is not known from other European countries, i…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryHabitatEcologyPeninsulaBiogeographyEast AsiaIntroduced speciesMainlandAquatic ScienceBiologyDisjunctInvasive speciesJournal of Crustacean Biology
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Response of macrophyte communities and status metrics to natural gradients and land use in boreal lakes

2012

Abstract We studied the relations of aquatic macrophyte communities, ecological quality metrics and water quality to lake characteristics and to land use defined at multiple spatial scales (three lake marginal zones (LMZs) of contrasting width and the whole topographic catchment) in 110 boreal lakes in Finland using ordination and generalised additive modelling. Variation in macrophyte community composition of our lakes was related to water quality, land use, latitude and lake morphology. Relationships of macrophyte status metrics – the proportion of type-specific species (TT50), Percent Model Affinity (PMA) and Trophic Index (TI) – to land use were scale dependent. The proportion of agricu…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryLand useEcologyta1172Drainage basinPlant ScienceAquatic ScienceMacrophyteHabitatWater Framework DirectiveBiological integrityIndicator speciesta1181Environmental scienceIndicator valuePhysical geographyAquatic Botany
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Macroinvertebrate communities in sediment and plants in coastal Mediterranean water bodies (Central Iberian Peninsula).

2007

Sediment and plant-associated macroinvertebrates were sampled in six shallow water bodies along the central part of the coast of Mediterranean Spain. The size of ponds, salinity and hydroperiod were highly variable. Seventy-one taxa were recorded, some of them were endemic or uncommon species, evidencing the important contribution of these ponds to biodiversity. Crustaceans and gastropods of biogeographical interest were found in the most primeval site. Correspondence analysis showed that macroinvertebrate assemblages responded to environmental variables such as salinity, temporality and eutrophication. The brackish water fauna was dominated by crustaceans, while oligochaeta and insect larv…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryMarshBrackish waterEcologyfungiBiodiversityWetlandAquatic ScienceSalinityCommon speciesparasitic diseasesSpecies richnessTrophic levelAnnales de Limnologie - International Journal of Limnology
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Tarsius tumpara: A New Tarsier Species from Siau Island, North Sulawesi

2008

Abstract: A new, critically endangered species of tarsier, one of the world's 25 most endangered primates, is described from the remote island of Siau, North Sulawesi, based on distinguishing characteristics of the tail tuft, pelage coloration, skull, and vocalizations. Siau is part of the Sangihe Island chain, a volcanic arc composed of islands that rise from the ocean floor. There is a single previous record of a tarsier from Siau; a skull in the Dresden Museum that Meyer (1897) classified with tarsiers from Sangihe Island as Tarsius sangirensis. Sangihe and Siau Islands are geologically separated by about 60 km of ocean that greatly exceeds 1,000 m in depth. Genetic data for the new spec…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryVolcanic arcbiologyEcologyBiogeographyEndangered speciesZoologyTarsius sangirensisbiology.organism_classificationTarsierCritically endangeredArchipelagoAnimal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTarsiusNature and Landscape ConservationPrimate Conservation
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Exotic Guavas are Foci of Forest Regeneration in Kenyan Farmland

2007

Fruiting trees in degraded areas are attractive for frugivorous birds and may become centers of regeneration. However, a number of tree species in degraded areas are exotic species. Thus, the question arises whether these exotic species can also act as foci for forest regeneration. In the farmland adjacent to Kakamega Forest, Kenya, we investigated the frugivore assemblage in, and seed rain and seedling establishment under, 29 fruiting exotic guava trees (Psidium guajava) at different distances to the forest. The results show that 40 frugivorous bird species visited guava trees. All of the seed and 82 percent of the seedling species found under the treecrowns were animal dispersed, 58 and 5…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyAgroforestrySeed dispersalMyrtaceaeIntroduced speciesbiology.organism_classificationShrublandForest restorationFrugivoreRestoration ecologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsWoody plantBiotropica
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