Search results for "Habit"

showing 10 items of 1816 documents

Drivers of plant richness patterns of Mediterranean riparian forests at local and regional scales have bottom-up and top-down effects

2019

Questions: It has been long recognized that community species richness depends on factors operating at different spatial scales. Most frequently, across-scale studies have focused on the impact of regional factors on local richness (top-down effects) while few have analyzed the importance of local factors on regional richness (bottom-up) and even fewer have tried to integrate effects on both directions. Our objectives were to reveal the key factors shaping plant species richness of Mediterranean riparian forests and to test whether empirical models based on top-down or bottom-up relationships are able to explain the spatial scaling of richness. Location: Southern half of Spain, SW Europe. M…

0106 biological sciencesAbiotic componentMediterranean climategeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyEcologyBiodiversityPlant ScienceVegetation010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeographyHabitatRiparian forestSpecies richness010606 plant biology & botanyRiparian zone
researchProduct

Conservation of the Grey Bush Cricket Platycleis albopunctata (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae) Under Differing Habitat Conditions: Implications From an In…

2009

Assessing the chance of survival of any species is a great challenge in conservation biology. In this chapter, we analyse the vulnerability of the grey bush cricket Platycleis albopunctata in habitats of different food availability under current and increased temperature conditions applying an individual-based model. Our simulations show that populations in warmer habitats with a higher food limitation have a much lower extinction risk than those living in habitats that are less food-limited and colder. An increase in mortalities of life stages severely increases the risk of population extinction, whereas a shift in the termination of egg diapause towards the beginning of the year caused by…

0106 biological sciencesAbiotic componenteducation.field_of_studyExtinctionExtinction probabilityEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyPopulationTettigoniidae15. Life on landDiapauseBiologybiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHabitat14. Life underwaterConservation biologyeducation
researchProduct

The interplay of landscape composition and configuration: new pathways to manage functional biodiversity and agroecosystem services across Europe

2019

Managing agricultural landscapes to support biodiversity and ecosystem services is a key aim of a sustainable agriculture. However, how the spatial arrangement of crop fields and other habitats in landscapes impacts arthropods and their functions is poorly known. Synthesising data from 49 studies (1515 landscapes) across Europe, we examined effects of landscape composition (% habitats) and configuration (edge density) on arthropods in fields and their margins, pest control, pollination and yields. Configuration effects interacted with the proportions of crop and non-crop habitats, and species’ dietary, dispersal and overwintering traits led to contrasting responses to landscape variables. O…

0106 biological sciencesAgroecosystempollinationBiodiversitybiological controlpölytys01 natural sciencestrait syndromeEcosystem servicesSustainable agricultureniveljalkaisetmaatalousympäristöComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS2. Zero hungerEcologyAgriculturaAgricultureBiodiversityeliöyhteisötresponse traitPE&RCEuropesemi-natural habitatGeographyPlantenecologie en NatuurbeheerCIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTASbiologinen torjuntaCrops AgriculturalPlant Ecology and Nature Conservation010603 evolutionary biologyCiencias BiológicasAnimalsEcosystemAgroecologyEcosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsarthropod community010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyEcología15. Life on landyieldbiodiversiteettiedge densityCIENCIAS AGRÍCOLAS13. Climate actionagroekologiaBiological dispersalmaisemaekologiaLandscape ecology[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyAgricultura Silvicultura y PescaAgroecologypest controlConservación de la Biodiversidad
researchProduct

The effects of drainage and restoration of pine mires on habitat structure, vegetation and ants

2016

Habitat loss and degradation are the main threats to biodiversity worldwide. For example, nearly 80% of peatlands in southern Finland have been drained. There is thus a need to safeguard the remaining pristine mires and to restore degraded ones. Ants play a pivotal role in many ecosystems and like many keystone plant species, shape ecosystem conditions for other biota. The effects of mire restoration and subsequent vegetation succession on ants, however, are poorly understood. We inventoried tree stands, vegetation, water-table level, and ants (with pitfall traps) in nine mires in southern Finland to explore differences in habitats, vegetation and ant assemblages among pristine, drained (30…

0106 biological sciencesAichi Biodiversity Target 15PeatFORMICA-AQUILONIAta1172ecological restorationpine bogs and fens010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesMiretransforming and transformed drained miresBOREAL FORESTSlcsh:ForestryditchingBogRestoration ecologyFormicidae4112 Forestrygeography.geographical_feature_categoryAgroforestryEcologyEcological ModelingASSEMBLY RULESEXTINCTION DEBTForestryVegetation15. Life on land010602 entomologywater-table levelGeographyHabitat destructionTree standBOGSWATER-LEVELlcsh:SD1-669.5ta1181COMMUNITIESSOUTHERN FINLANDWOOD ANTSExtinction debt
researchProduct

Manipulating Individual Decisions and Environmental Conditions Reveal Individual Quality in Decision-Making and Non-Lethal Costs of Predation Risk

2012

Received: July 6, 2012; Accepted: November 13, 2012; Published: December 13, 2012

0106 biological sciencesAnimal breedingEcophysiology01 natural sciencesNesting BehaviorPredationSongbirdsBehavioral EcologyOrnithologyMolecular Cell BiologyCellular Stress ResponsesAnimal Managementmedia_common0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryEcologyAnimal BehaviorEcologyReproductionPhysiological conditionQRCommunity EcologyHabitatMedicineFemaleResearch ArticleOffspringSciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectDecision MakingEnvironmentBiology010603 evolutionary biologyBirds03 medical and health sciencesAnimalsQuality (business)BiologyCommunity StructureEcosystemSelection (genetic algorithm)030304 developmental biologyEvolutionary BiologyReproductive successHawksSpecies InteractionsEvolutionary EcologyPredatory Behaviorta1181Veterinary ScienceZoologyPLoS One
researchProduct

One taxon does not fit all: Herb-layer diversity and stand structural complexity are weak predictors of biodiversity in Fagus sylvatica forests

2016

Abstract Since adequate information on the distribution of biodiversity is hardly achievable, biodiversity indicators are necessary to support the management of ecosystems. These surrogates assume that either some habitat features, or the biodiversity patterns observed in a well-known taxon, can be used as a proxy of the diversity of one or more target taxa. Nevertheless, at least for certain taxa, the validity of this assumption has not yet been sufficiently demonstrated. We investigated the effectiveness of both a habitat- and a taxa-based surrogate in six European beech forests in the Apennines. Particularly, we tested: (1) whether the stand structural complexity and the herb-layer speci…

0106 biological sciencesApennineApennines010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesBiodiversityGeneral Decision SciencesComplementarity010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesEuropean beech forestsHabitat-based surrogatesLichenBeechEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesDecision Sciences(all)EcologybiologyEcologySpecies diversityBody size and species richnessCross-taxonbiology.organism_classificationEuropean beech forestTaxonHabitatHabitat-based surrogateSpecies richnessSpecies-based surrogatesApennines; Cross-taxon; Complementarity; European beech forests; Habitat-based surrogates; Species-based surrogatesEcological Indicators
researchProduct

Phylogeny of the ant genus Aphaenogaster (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in the Iberian Peninsula, with the description of a new species

2018

A phylogenetic tree of the Iberian Aphaenogaster species - except for A. splendida (Roger) - and a key to the worker caste of all Iberian Aphaenogaster species are proposed. The position of A. striativentris Forel and A. cardenai Espadaler is discussed, stating the possibility that this second species may belong to a new, undescribed genus. Aphaenogaster ulibeli n. sp. is described from the Iberian Peninsula. Its closest relatives are A. gibbosa (Latreille) and A. striativentris. Its habitat seems to be restricted to caducifolia forests in the Western Central Massif. 

0106 biological sciencesAphaenogasterulibeliAphaenogaster010607 zoologyZoologyHymenoptera010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenusPeninsulaPhylogeneticsPhylogenyQH540-549.5geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyPhylogenetic treebiology.organism_classificationNew speciesKeyQL1-991HabitatInsect ScienceKey (lock)QH1-278.5Natural history (General)ZoologyIberian PeninsulaSociobiology
researchProduct

Forty questions of importance to the policy and practice of native oyster reef restoration in Europe

2020

© 2020 The Authors. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd Oyster reefs are among the most threatened marine habitats globally. In Europe, oyster reefs have been extirpated from most locations within their historical range. Active restoration of the native oyster (Ostrea edulis) in Europe has grown substantially in recent years. In sharing experiences between oyster restoration projects in Europe at the Native Oyster Restoration Alliance conference, NORA2, in Edinburgh in May 2019, it became apparent that a number of similar barriers are experienced. This study identified the top 40 questions, which, if answered, would have the greatest inf…

0106 biological sciencesAquatic Ecology and Water Quality ManagementOysterBiosecurityalien speciesinsights01 natural sciencesVotingpollutionpreferencesmedia_commoneducation.field_of_studysubtidalEcologybiologyconservationalien species ; estuary ; fishing ; invertebrates ; pollution ; restoration ; subtidalGeographyIfremerOyster reef restorationrestorationmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationpanoramasubstrateAquatic Science010603 evolutionary biologyflat oysterestuarysettlementlarval developmentbiology.animal14. Life underwaterOstrea eduliseducationEnvironmental planningfishingNature and Landscape ConservationecosystemBusiness Manager projecten Midden-NoordACL010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyostrea-edulis l.Marine habitatsmarineAquatische Ecologie en WaterkwaliteitsbeheerVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480::Marinbiologi: 497invertebratesbiology.organism_classificationThreatened speciesWIAS[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyBusiness Manager projects Mid-North
researchProduct

Diplurans of subsurface terrestrial habitats in the Iberian Peninsula, with a new species description (Diplura: Campodeidae)

2017

Although Iberian subsurface terrestrial habitats have been sampled for a half century, they remain poorly known. During the last five years much more sampling of these subsurface habitats has been made, mainly in scree slopes (also called colluvial Mesovoid Shallow Substratum habitats, MSS) but also in alluvial debris of temporal watercourses (alluvial MSS). In our study, diplurans, a basal hexapod group, were extracted from two hundred traps installed in 69 locations in the mountain ranges of six different regions of the Iberian Peninsula, from north to south: Cantabrian, Pyrenees, Iberic System, Central System, Prebaetic and Penibaetic Mountains. A total of 1251 specimens in fifteen diplu…

0106 biological sciencesArthropodaAlluvial MSS habitatsEcology010607 zoologyHexapodaBiologybiology.organism_classificationDiplura010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHexapodaSpecies descriptionColluvial MSS habitatsMesovoid Shallow SubstratumHabitatCampodeidaeCampodeaScreeAnimal Science and ZoologyAlluviumDipluraScree slope faunaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTaxonomy
researchProduct

Experimentally induced community assembly of polypores reveals the importance of both environmental filtering and assembly history

2019

The community assembly of wood-inhabiting fungi follows a successional pathway, with newly emerging resource patches being colonised by pioneer species, followed by those specialised on later stages of decay. The primary coloniser species have been suggested to strongly influence the assembly of the later-arriving community. We created an artificial resource pulse and studied the assembly of polypores over an 11yr period to ask how the identities of the colonising species depend on the environmental characteristics and the assembly history of the dead wood unit. Our results support the view that community assembly in fungi is a highly stochastic process, as even detailed description of the …

0106 biological sciencesArtificial resource pulseTime seriesPioneer speciesEcologyCommunity assemblyEcologyHost (biology)Ecological ModelingCommunity structurePriority effectsDead woodPlant Science15. Life on landBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesWood-inhabiting fungiRestoration1181 Ecology evolutionary biologySpatial aggregationTree speciesPolyporesEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics010606 plant biology & botanyFungal Ecology
researchProduct