Search results for "Ecological succession"

showing 10 items of 96 documents

Re-establishment of zooplankton communities in temporary ponds after autumn flooding: Does restoration age matter?

2012

Abstract In temporary ponds, reestablishment of zooplankton communities depends on recruitment from the egg bank, the arrival of dispersers from within the region, and on successful establishment of newly arrived species following interaction with local abiotic and biotic factors. When the ponds dry up, zooplankton species may survive as dormant eggs, and since not all eggs hatch in the next season, eggs will accumulate in the sediment over time, representing an archive of the pond's historical biodiversity. To study the effect of “restoration age” (the time since a water body was restored), we studied groups of ponds that were restored in different years (1998, 2003 and 2007). The restorat…

Abiotic componentBiotic componentEcologyparasitic diseasesfungiBiodiversityBiological dispersalEcological successionSpecies richnessAquatic ScienceBiologyZooplanktonRestoration ecologyLimnologica
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Möglichkeiten und Grenzen einer Ökosystem-Rekonstruktion am Beispiel des spätpaläozoischen lakustrinen Paläo-Ökosystems. 1. Theoretische und methodis…

1998

In analogy to ecosystems, palaeoecosystems are defined here as the palaeocommunities of a given area and their relationships to the abiotic variables of their respective environments. They are characterized by (a) their species diversity, (b) the trophic structure of their palaeocommunities, based on their food webs, and (c), based on their detailed historical development, ecosystem functions such as stability, resilience, and succession. Due to numerous taphonomic biases, palaeocommunities can only be reconstructed from very few fossil horizons (taphocoenoses). Important conditions for such reconstructions are an uninterrupted vertical sequence of taphocoenoses with little time-averaging, …

Abiotic componentTaphonomyExtant taxonEcologyPaleontologySpecies diversityEcosystemEcological successionBiologyFossilizationTrophic levelPaläontologische Zeitschrift
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Effect of a Brassica Juncea Cover Crop on a Mono-Succession of Melon

2013

The ban of methyl bromide and the need for low environmental impact of agriculture has recently increased the interest in the biofumigant effects of Brassica species on soil-borne pathogens. Many researches have tested the toxic effects of Brassica green manures on several soil-borne pathogens in vitro, but field studies have not assessed definitely the efficiency of biofumigation at the field scale and the effect on crop development and production quality. The aim of this research was to evaluate the effect of a winter-spring cover crop of Brassica juncea compared to bare soil on a mono-succession of melon. The biomass of the B. juncea plants or of the weeds eventually developed in bare so…

AgronomyMelonBrassicaEcological successionSettore AGR/04 - Orticoltura E FloricolturaHorticultureBiologygreen manure biofumigation horticulture Brassicaceae Indian mustard crop rotationCover cropbiology.organism_classification
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Investigating the influence of climate changes on rodent communities at a regional-scale (MIS 1-3, southwestern France).

2016

25 pages; International audience; Terrestrial ecosystems have continuously evolved throughout the Late Pleistocene and theHolocene, deeply affected by both progressive environmental and climatic modifications, aswell as by abrupt and large climatic changes such as the Heinrich or Dansgaard-Oeschgerevents. Yet, the impacts of these different events on terrestrial mammalian communities arepoorly known, as is the role played by potential refugia on geographical species distributions.This study examines community changes in rodents of southwestern France between50 and 10 ky BP by integrating 94 dated faunal assemblages coming from 37 archaeologicalsites. This work reveals that faunal distributi…

Atmospheric ScienceGeologic Sediments010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesStratigraphylcsh:MedicineSocial SciencesEcological succession01 natural scienceslaw.inventionGeographical LocationsPleistocene EpochlawRadiocarbon datinglcsh:ScienceHolocene[ SDU.STU.PG ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/PaleontologyMammalsClimatologyMultidisciplinaryFossilsEcologyGeologyRadioactive Carbon DatingEuropeGeographyArchaeologyVertebratesTerrestrial ecosystemFrance[SDU.STU.PG]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/PaleontologyResearch Article010506 paleontologyPleistoceneClimate ChangeClimate changeRodentiaRodentsAllerød oscillationPaleoclimatologyAnimalsPaleoclimatology0105 earth and related environmental sciences[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecologylcsh:RVolesOrganismsBiology and Life SciencesPaleontologyGeologic Time15. Life on land13. Climate actionArchaeological DatingPeople and PlacesEarth SciencesCenozoic Eralcsh:Q[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology
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Large Blooms of

2018

ABSTRACT Biological soil crusts (biocrusts) account for a substantial portion of primary production in dryland ecosystems. They successionally mature to deliver a suite of ecosystem services, such as carbon sequestration, water retention and nutrient cycling, and climate regulation. Biocrust assemblages are extremely well adapted to survive desiccation and to rapidly take advantage of the periodic precipitation events typical of arid ecosystems. Here we focus on the wetting response of incipient cyanobacterial crusts as they mature from “light” to “dark.” We sampled a cyanobacterial biocrust chronosequence before (dry) and temporally following a controlled wetting event and used high-throug…

Bacillalesfood and beveragesFirmicutespulsed-activity eventecological successioncarbon lossstabilitybiological soil crustresistanceRNA Ribosomal 16Secosystem servicesEcosystemSoil MicrobiologyResearch ArticlemBio
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Early plant succession in two abandoned cut-over peatland areas

1990

Initial stages of plant succession (from 0 to 8 or 9 yr) were studied on abandoned peat harvest sites of two adjacent areas in Finland. At the Mustasuo area only 13 field layer species, all perennials, and 3 ground layer species became established during that period and species composition stayed relatively constant. All species occurred sparsely with low biomass. The Riitasuo area was colonized by 43 field layer and 19 ground layer species during the first 8 yr of succession. In that area the originally plantless sites were totally covered by plants within a few years. Many of the first species to arrive were annuals, most of which were soon replaced by perennial species. The great differe…

Biomass (ecology)chemistry.chemical_compoundPeatPerennial plantNitratechemistryEcologyPeriod (geology)Environmental scienceEcological successionRevegetationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAmmonium nitrogenEcography
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Phytoplankton equilibrium phases during thermal stratification in a deep subtropical reservoir

2008

SUMMARY 1. Equilibrium and non-equilibrium hypotheses have often been used to explain observations in community ecology. Published case studies have demonstrated that steady state phytoplankton assemblages are more likely to occur in deep lakes than in shallow mixed ones. 2. Phytoplankton seasonal succession was studied by weekly sampling in Faxinal Reservoir (S Brazil), a subtropical deep, clear, warm monomictic and slightly eutrophic reservoir. This study demonstrated an alternation of steady and non-steady state phases of phytoplankton assemblages with different dominant species during the steady states. 3. During the studied period, three steady states were identified with different dom…

CommunityEcologyStratification (water)AsterionellaBrazil equilibrium phase monomictic reservoir steady stateEcological successionAquatic ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationWater columnOceanographySettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataPhytoplanktonEutrophicationHydrobiologyFreshwater Biology
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The Ecology of Ostracoda Across Levels of Biological Organisation from Individual to Ecosystem

2012

Abstract Palaeoenvironmental and palaeoclimatic applications of fossil ostracods rely on a uniformitarian approach underpinned by knowledge of the biology and ecology of living species. This review reveals that in recent decades, major advances have been made in the understanding of species’ abiotic niches in relation to their preferences for different water chemistries and temperatures. However, the underlying ecophysiological mechanisms for such preferences are still largely unknown. Only a few works analyse in detail aspects of population growth or species interactions (competition, predation) in the framework of classical ecological theories. Similarly, the role of Ostracoda in the asse…

Ecological nicheAbiotic componentEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectEcology (disciplines)EcosystemEcological successionPopulation ecologyBiologyBiological organisationCompetition (biology)media_common
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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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Understanding properly the `potential natural vegetation' concept

2010

This is a response to critical comments concerning the inappropriate use of the potential natural vegetation (PNV) concept made in a recent contribution to the Commentary section of this journal. We consider that the PNV concept has been misinterpreted. PNV has been used extensively in several European countries since the mid-1950s and was never intended to be used to make a prediction of what vegetation would dominate in an area if human influence were removed. PNV maps express hypothetical assumptions of what corresponds to dominant or natural vegetation in each area. Remnants of the vegetation of the past provided by palaeopalynology and other disciplines provide valuable information for…

Ecologybusiness.industryEcologyEnvironmental resource managementVegetationEcological successionPotential natural vegetationNatural (archaeology)GeographyHabitatNature Conservationmedia_common.cataloged_instanceHabitats DirectiveEuropean unionbusinessEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonJournal of Biogeography
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