Search results for "CAPE"

showing 10 items of 1938 documents

Forest Naturalness in Northern Europe: Perspectives on Processes, Structures and Species Diversity

2011

Saving the remaining natural forests in northern Europe has been one of the main goals to halt the ongoing decline of forest biodiversity. To facilitate the recognition, mapping and efficient conservation of natural forests, there is an urgent need for a general formulation, based on ecological patterns and processes, of the concept of “forest naturalness”. However, complexity, structural idiosyncracy and dynamical features of unmanaged forest ecosystems at various spatio-temporal scales pose major challenges for such a formulation. The definitions hitherto used for the concept of forest naturalness can be fruitfully grouped into three dimensions: 1) structure-based concepts of natural …

EcologyEcological ModelingEcology (disciplines)Natural forestBiodiversitySpecies diversityForestryForest restorationNaturalnessGeographylcsh:SD1-669.5lcsh:ForestryIntact forest landscapeForest biodiversity
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The Revision of the Crustacea Collection of the Museum of Zoology “P. Doderlein” under the Framework of the National Biodiversity Future Center

2023

The collection of Crustacea preserved in the Museum of Zoology “P. Doderlein” in Palermo (Italy) has been revised in the framework of the activities of the National Biodiversity Future Center. The main part of the collection is composed of Decapoda, while a smaller part includes Stomatopoda, Isopoda, Amphipoda, and Cirripedia. Overall the collection includes common species, some of which are now protected.

EcologyEcological ModelingNatural history museumDecapodaCirripediaMediterranean seaSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaAmphipodaAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)SicilyNature and Landscape ConservationStomatopodaIsopoda
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Evaluation of the “Bottleneck” Effect in an Isolated Population of Microtus hartingi (Rodentia, Arvicolinae) from the Eastern Rhodopes (Bulgaria) by …

2022

An integrative analysis of an isolated population of Harting’s vole (Microtus hartingi) from the Eastern Rhodope Mountains (Bulgaria) was carried out by morphological and morphometric methods, computed tomography, Cytb variation data, and experimental hybridization. Substantial changes in the development of the skull and teeth were found. Nevertheless, those voles can live to the senex stage. A phylogenetic reconstruction based on Cytb sequences showed that M. hartingi from the Eastern Rhodopes forms a separate clade, which is a sister clade to the voles from Northeastern Greece (also from the foothills of the Rhodopes). M. hartingi from the Rhodopes is mostly isolated reproductively …

EcologyEcological Modelingvoles; <i>Microtus hartingi</i>; morphology; morphometry; computed tomography; <i>Cytb</i>; experimental hybridizationAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Nature and Landscape ConservationDiversity
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The desert at Zait Bay, Egypt: a bird migration bottleneck of global importance

2009

The study area at Zait Bay, Egypt (c. 700 km2) is situated in the middle of the West Asian-East African migration flyway used by very large numbers of soaring migrants. At this site the corridor narrows into a bottleneck. There exist only very few bottlenecks of this magnitude in the world. Observations were performed at all hours between sunrise and sunset at 26 observation sites, situated 5 km apart. The northern part of the area under investigation (19 observation sites) was situated within the Gebel El Zeit IBA (criteria A1 and A4iv), while the southernmost part (8 observation sites) was outside. The overall evaluation has shown that 179,681 soaring birds including 122,454 storks and 36…

EcologyEcologyBird migrationGrus (genus)Biologybiology.organism_classificationPredationFisheryAnimal ecologyFlywayThreatened speciesAnimal Science and ZoologyBird conservationBayNature and Landscape ConservationBird Conservation International
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Fungi and Bacteria in Indoor Cultural Heritage Environments: Microbial-related Risks for Artworks and Human Health

2016

Cultural heritage constitutive materials can provide excellent substrates for microbial colonization, highly influenced by thermo-hygrometric parameters. In cultural heritage-related environments, a detrimental microbial load may be present both on manufacts surface and in the aerosol. In this study, bacterial and fungal colonisation has been investigated in three Sicilian confined environments (archive, cave and hypogea), each with peculiar structures and different thermo-hygrometric parameters. Particular attention has been paid to microorganisms able to induce artifacts biodeterioration and to release biological particles in the aerosol (spores, cellular debrides, toxins and allergens) p…

EcologyEcologyMicroorganismfungi010401 analytical chemistryBiological particles010501 environmental sciencesEnvironmental Science (miscellaneous)BiologyIntegrated approachbiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesPollution0104 chemical sciencesCultural heritageColonisationHuman healthSymbiosisAerobiology Bioaerosol Biodeterioration Healthcare Preventive ConservationSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataBacteria0105 earth and related environmental sciencesNature and Landscape Conservation
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Quantifying the Indicator Power of an Indicator Species

2009

Biodiversity indicator species are needed for classifying biotopes and sites for conservation, and a number of methods have been developed for determining indicator species for this purpose. Nevertheless, in addition to site classification, there is sometimes a need to define an indicator species that indicates the occurrence of another species. For example, when a species of interest (target species) is difficult to detect or identify, a reliable indicator species can function as a tool that saves time and money. We derived a method that provides a quantitative measure of the indicator power (IP) of an indicator species for the target species or any species assemblage. We calculated the me…

EcologyEcologyRare speciesEndangered speciesBiodiversityBiodiversityBiologyWoodpeckerbiology.organism_classificationHabitatIndicator speciesThreatened speciesSpecies richnessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEnvironmental MonitoringNature and Landscape ConservationConservation Biology
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Effects of Local Disturbance of Tropical Forests on Frugivores and Seed Removal of a Small-Seeded Afrotropical Tree

2008

Small-scale, local disturbance of tropical forests, for example from selective logging, is widespread, but its effects on biodiversity and ecosystem function have rarely been studied. In 3 East African tropical rainforests, we investigated the effect of different levels of local forest disturbance on the frugivore community and on tree visitation and fruit removal rates of the small-seeded tree Celtis durandii. We quantified birds and primates in little and heavily disturbed sites, distinguishing between forest specialists, forest generalists, and forest visitors. We quantified frugivorous tree visitors and seed removal rates of C. durandii trees in the same sites. Forest disturbance reduce…

EcologyEcologySeed dispersalBiodiversityfood and beveragesTropicsRainforestBiologyGeneralist and specialist speciesFrugivoreSpecies richnessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationTropical rainforestConservation Biology
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2015

Prey preference of top predators and energy flow across habitat boundaries are of fundamental importance for structure and function of aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, as they may have strong effects on production, species diversity, and food-web stability. In lakes, littoral and pelagic food-web compartments are typically coupled and controlled by generalist fish top predators. However, the extent and determinants of such coupling remains a topical area of ecological research and is largely unknown in oligotrophic high-latitude lakes. We analyzed food-web structure and resource use by a generalist top predator, the Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus (L.), in 17 oligotrophic subarctic lakes…

EcologyEcologySpecies diversityPelagic zone15. Life on landBiologybiology.organism_classificationPredationFishery13. Climate actionForage fish14. Life underwaterSpecies richnessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationSalvelinusApex predatorTrophic levelEcology and Evolution
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Assessing the efficacy of direct conservation interventions: clutch protection of the leatherback marine turtle in the Dominican Republic

2014

AbstractThe beaches of Jaragua National Park in the Dominican Republic are the country's last known major nesting site for the leatherback marine turtle Dermochelys coriacea. This nesting aggregation is threatened by widespread illegal egg take, and clutch relocation and artificial incubation have been carried out as protection measures since 1974. We assess the efficacy of such efforts and investigate how artificial incubation may be influencing the success and sex ratios of clutches. We compare hatching success, incubation duration and embryo mortality in in-situ clutches (n = 43) with those incubated artificially at sites in the east and west of the Park (n = 35 and n = 31, respectively)…

EcologyHatchingNational parkBiologylaw.inventionlawembryonic structuresThreatened speciesbehavior and behavior mechanismsClutchTurtle (robot)RelocationIncubationreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSex ratioNature and Landscape ConservationOryx
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The impact of economic, social and political factors on the landscape structure of the Vidzeme Uplands in Latvia

2005

Abstract Changes in landscape structure in a typical part of the Vidzeme Uplands in central Latvia during the 20th century are analysed and anticipated changes in the 21st century are projected. Forest areas gradually increased in the Vidzeme Uplands over the course of the 20th century. This increase was associated with several factors: the economic policy in Latvia during the 1930s, the exile of farmers in 1940 and 1949 after the Soviet occupation of Latvia, the aggregation of land into collective farms, the amalgamation of small collective farms, the formation of large-scale Soviet collective farms, and widespread land melioration. Since land reform in the 1990s, following the restoration…

EcologyLand useAgroforestrymedia_common.quotation_subjectLatvianEcological successionManagement Monitoring Policy and LawIndependencelanguage.human_languageUrban StudiesPoliticsGeographyEnvironmental protectionAgricultural landlanguageEconomic impact analysisLand reformNature and Landscape Conservationmedia_commonLandscape and Urban Planning
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