Search results for "Education"

showing 10 items of 26766 documents

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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Population variability in space and time.

2000

One of the most ubiquitous phenomena of all natural populations is their variability in numbers in space and time. However, there are notable differences among populations in the way the population size fluctuates. One of the major challenges in population and community ecology is to explain and understand this variety and to find possible underlying rules that might be modified from case-to-case. Population variability also has a spatial component because fluctuations are often synchronized over relatively large distances. Recently, this has led to growing interest in how 'internal' (density-dependent) processes interact with 'external' factors such as environmental variability.

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyExtinctionCommunityEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyPopulation sizeEcology (disciplines)Population010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeographyDensity dependenceNatural population growthSpatial variabilityeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTrends in ecologyevolution
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The ecology of sexual conflict: Temperature variation in the social environment can drastically modulate male harm to females

2019

Sexual conflict is a fundamental driver of male/female adaptations, an engine of biodiversity and a crucial determinant of population viability. Sexual conflict frequently leads to behavioural adaptations that allow males to displace their rivals, but in doing so harm those same females they are competing to access, which can decrease population viability and facilitate extinction. We are far from understanding what factors modulate the intensity of sexual conflict and particularly the role of ecology in mediating underlying behavioural adaptations. In this study, we show that, in Drosophila melanogaster, variations in environmental temperature of ±4°C decrease male harm impact on female fi…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyExtinctionEcologyEcology (disciplines)PopulationBiodiversitySocial environmentBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSexual conflictHarmVariation (linguistics)educationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics010606 plant biology & botanyFunctional Ecology
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Punishment of polygyny

1999

We investigated the evolution of monogamy (one male, one female) and polygyny (one male, more than one female). In particular, we studied whether it is possible for a mutant polygynous mating strategy to invade a resident population of monogamous breeders and, alternatively, whether a mutant monogamy can invade resident polygyny. Our population obeys discrete-time Ricker dynamics. The role of males and females in the breeding system is incorporated via the harmonic birth function. The results of the invasability analysis are straightforward. Polygyny is an evolutionarily stable strategy mating system; this holds throughout the examined range of numbers of offspring produced per female. So t…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyOffspring010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyPopulationZoologyGeneral MedicineBiologyMating system010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPopulation densityArticleGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEvolutionarily stable strategyBiological dispersalMatingGeneral Agricultural and Biological ScienceseducationPolygynyGeneral Environmental ScienceDemographyProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
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Genetic analysis of populations of brown trout (Salmo truttaL.) from the Romanian Carpathians

2019

The Carpathian Mountains are one of the most complex orogenetic areas of Europe, with unique fauna, including the brown trout (Salmo trutta). In this study we performed population genetic analysis of 12 differentS. truttapopulations using two types of molecular markers: nine microsatellites and mitochondrial D-loop sequences. The following working hypothesis was considered: the Romanian Carpathians and their surrounding lowlands can be key relief units based on which theS. truttagenetic diversity, spread, distribution, connectivity, relative isolation and genetic divergence can be at least partially explained. The phylogenetic analysis revealed that the majority of sequences were grouped in…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyGenetic diversityPhylogenetic treebiology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyPopulationZoologyAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesNucleotide diversityGenetic divergenceBrown troutSalmoeducationInbreedingAquatic Living Resources
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Non-unique population dynamics: basic patterns

2000

We review the basic patterns of complex non-uniqueness in simple discrete-time population dynamics models. We begin by studying a population dynamics model of a single species with a two-stage, two-habitat life cycle. We then explore in greater detail two ecological models describing host‐macroparasite and host‐parasitoid interspecific interactions. In general, several types of attractors, e.g. point equilibria vs. chaotic, periodic vs. quasiperiodic and quasiperiodic vs. chaotic attractors, may coexist in the same mapping. This non-uniqueness also indicates that the bifurcation diagrams, or the routes to chaos, depend on initial conditions and are therefore non-unique. The basins of attrac…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyMathematical modelEcologyEcological ModelingPopulationChaoticBiologyBifurcation diagram010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences010601 ecologyFractalAnimal ecologyQuasiperiodic functionAttractorStatistical physicseducationEcological Modelling
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2018

The Atlantic surfclam (Spisula solidissima) is a commercially important species in North American waters, undergoing biological and ecological shifts. These are attributed, in part, to environmental modifications in its habitat and driven by climate change. Investigation of shell growth patterns, trace elements, and isotopic compositions require an examination of growth lines and increments preserved in biogenic carbonates. However, growth pattern analysis of S. solidissima is challenging due to multiple disturbance lines caused by environmental stress, erosion in umbonal shell regions, and constraints related to sample size and preparation techniques. The present study proposes an alternat…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinary010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesbiologyRange (biology)010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyPopulationShell (structure)Context (language use)Bivalviabiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesOceanography13. Climate action14. Life underwaterGrowth rateeducationSpisulaGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesIsotope analysisPLOS ONE
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En quin grau afecten les pseudociències a la comunitat educativa?

2018

Pseudosciences are present and accepted naturally by broad sectors of the population. Despite their potential risks, they are not taken into account when teaching science; some universities have even offered official pseudoscientific courses. In this text we want to learn about the degree of acceptance of these beliefs in high-school science teachers in training, who have been detected to have significant levels of acceptance of pseudoscience.

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinaryPopulationPseudoscienceMindset04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesScience teachersAffect (psychology)01 natural sciencesTraining (civil)History and Philosophy of ScienceTeaching science040103 agronomy & agricultureMathematics education0401 agriculture forestry and fisherieseducationPsychology010606 plant biology & botanyMètode Revista de difusió de la investigació
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The Spatial Dimension in Population Fluctuations

1997

Theoretical research into the dynamics of coupled populations has suggested a rich ensemble of spatial structures that are created and maintained either by external disturbances or self-reinforcing interactions among the populations. Long-term data of the Canadian lynx from eight Canadian provinces display large-scale spatial synchrony in population fluctuations. The synchronous dynamics are not time-invariant, however, as pairs of populations that are initially in step may drift out of phase and back into phase. These observations are in agreement with predictions of a spatially-linked population model and support contemporary population ecology theory.

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinarybiology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyPopulationCanadian lynxPopulation ecologybiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesOut of phaseGeographyDimension (vector space)Population modelClimatologySynchronismeducationSpatial organizationScience
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Comparative analysis of abundance–occupancy relationships for species at risk at both broad taxonomic and spatial scales

2015

The abundance–occupancy relationship is one of the most well-examined relationships in ecology. At the species level, a positive association has been widely documented. However, until recently, research on the nature of this relationship at broad taxonomic and spatial scales has been limited. Here, we perform a comparative analysis of 12 taxonomic groups across a large spatial scale (Canada), using data on Canadian species at risk: amphibians, arthropods, birds, freshwater fishes, lichens, marine fishes, marine mammals, molluscs, mosses, reptiles, terrestrial mammals, and vascular plants. We find a significantly positive relationship in all taxonomic groups with the exception of freshwater…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyOccupancyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyEcology (disciplines)PopulationZoology15. Life on landBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesAbundance (ecology)Spatial ecologyAnimal Science and Zoology14. Life underwaterTaxonomic rankLicheneducationSpecies at riskEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCanadian Journal of Zoology
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