Search results for "Araneus"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Reducing Mortality of Shrews in Rodent Live Trapping — a Method Increasing Live-Trap Selectivity with Shrew Exits

2013

Shrews have very high metabolic rates and are often unintentionally starved in rodent live-traps during capture-mark-recapture (CMR) studies. Here, we suggest a shrew exit as a modification to rodent traps. To test whether this modification is (1) saving shrews and (2) not jeopardizing results of rodent captures, we compared captures in Ugglan traps with and without shrew exits, studying bank voles (Myodes glareolus) in a spruce forest in central Finland. Numbers of captured bank voles and body size of smallest juvenile bank voles were not affected by the shrew exit, while the number of captured common shrews (Sorex araneus) was reduced from 31 to 0 individuals per 100 trap nights. However,…

AraneusSpruce forestEcologybiologyRodentEcologyShrewMyodes glareolusTrappingSorexbiology.organism_classificationBody weightbiology.animalta1181Animal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationAnnales Zoologici Fennici
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State-dependent foraging: lactating voles adjust their foraging behavior according to the presence of a potential nest predator and season

2015

Parental care often produces a trade-off between meeting nutritional demands of offspring and the duties of offspring protection, especially in altricial species. Parents have to leave their young unattended for foraging trips, during which nestlings are exposed to predators. We investigated how rodent mothers of altricial young respond to risk of nest predation in their foraging decisions. We studied foraging behavior of lactating bank voles (Myodes glareolus) exposed to a nest predator, the common shrew (Sorex araneus). We conducted the experiment in summer (high resource provisioning for both species) and autumn (less food available) in 12 replicates with fully crossed factors “shrew pre…

2. Zero hungerOriginal PaperbiologyEcologyeducationShrewForagingSeasonalityCommon shrewbiology.organism_classificationOptimal foraging theoryPredationNestAnimal ecologybiology.animal1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyMyodes glareolusNest protectionAnimal Science and ZoologyInterferencePaternal careEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInstitut für Biochemie und BiologieOptimal foragingSorex araneus
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Effects of Long-Term Habitat Protection on Montane Small Mammals: Are Sorex araneus and S. minutus More Sensitive Than Previously Considered?

2022

Protection of natural areas by restricting human activities aims to preserve plant and animal populations and whole communities, ensuring the conservation of biological diversity and enhancement of ecosystem services. Therefore, it is expected that the longer the protection, the stronger the desired effects. We evaluated the responses of small mammals at the population and community levels under protection in the southern Carpathian Mountains. We surveyed small mammals for five years in sites with long- and short-term protection and non-protected. Besides protection status, we included elevation, habitat heterogeneity, and the month of survey as predictors in our models. As response variabl…

<i>S. minutus</i>habitat heterogeneityEcologyseasonalityQH301-705.5Ecological Modelingprotected areaBiology (General)Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)elevational patternprotected area; habitat heterogeneity; elevational pattern; seasonality; <i>Sorex araneus</i>; <i>S. minutus</i>; <i>Muscardinus avellanarius</i>; monitoring methods; conservation management; Southern Carpathians<i>Sorex araneus</i>Nature and Landscape ConservationDiversity
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A TEST FOR REPRODUCTIVE SEPARATION OF ALTERNATE GENERATIONS IN A BIENNIAL SPIDER, ARANEUS DIADEMATUS (ARANEAE, ARANEIDAE)

2002

In Denmark, two seemingly distinct size-classes, 3rd and 4th instar juveniles and repro- ductive adults, of Araneus diadematus are found during every breeding season in autumn, indicating a non-overlapping biennial life-cycle. We tested the hypothesis that alternate generations might experience a degree of reproductive isolation, using the distribution of nuclear (allozyme) and maternal (mtDNA) genetic markers. Individuals of a locality behaved as belonging to a random mating population, irrespective of size. No differences were found between any size-class pairs, within and between 2 yr, or among geographically distant samples. Processes that may lead to this result are discussed: the bien…

Spidereducation.field_of_studybiologyEcologyPopulationAraneus diadematusReproductive isolationbiology.organism_classificationGenetic markerInsect ScienceSeasonal breederInstarMatingeducationJournal of Arachnology
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