Search results for "Population density"

showing 10 items of 194 documents

Fish community responses to pulp and paper mill effluents at the southern Lake Saimaa, Finland.

2002

Abstract The fish community in sublittoral and profundal waters, at stony shores, and densities of vendace larvae were studied in the southern Lake Saimaa, Finland. The objective was to investigate the possible recovery of fish populations after modernizations at the pulp and paper mills discharging into the lake. Sublittoral and profundal waters were studied by gill net trial fishings, stony shores by electrofishing, and vendace larvae by beach seine. The research area was divided in a polluted (0.5–4.0% effluent), an intermediate (0.1–0.5%) and a ‘clean’ reference area. The fish community in sublittoral and profundal waters in the lake was dominated (>60%) by perch and roach. Relative abu…

PaperHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisFaunaStone loachPopulation DynamicsIndustrial WasteToxicologyPopulation densityWaste Disposal Fluidbiology.animalparasitic diseasesAnimalsProfundal zoneFinlandPerchbiologyEcologyfungiWater PollutionFishesGeneral MedicineMinnowbiology.organism_classificationPollutionFisheryElectrofishingLarvaEutrophicationWater Pollutants ChemicalEnvironmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987)
researchProduct

Distribution and habitat selection of wintering birds in urban environments

1998

Habitat selection of wintering land-birds was studied in 31 human settlements in Finland. A total of 26 wintering bird species representing 5155 individuals were observed. Between-year variation (CVB%) and short-term fluctuation within one winter (CVW%) in species richness (CVB=10% CVW=15%) were low, as were total numbers of birds (CVB=22% CVW=24%) and populations of the most common bird species (CVB=20–40% CVW=15–47%). The most abundant bird species (e.g., Passer domesticus, Parus major and Pica pica) occurred in most of the study sites. The total densities of omnivorous birds, sedentary birds and bird species that commonly use feeding tables were higher in a heavily urbanized areas than i…

ParusEcologybiologyEcologyCerthia familiarisManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawbiology.organism_classificationPopulation densityUrban StudiesHabitatCanonical correspondence analysisUrbanizationSpecies richnessOmnivoreNature and Landscape ConservationLandscape and Urban Planning
researchProduct

An Ecological Study to Investigate Links Between Atmospheric Pollutants From Farming and SARS-CoV-2 Mortality

2021

AbstractExposure to atmospheric particulate matter and nitrogen dioxide has been linked to SARS-CoV-2 infection and death. We hypothesized that an interaction between SARS-CoV-2 infection and exposure to farming-related atmospheric pollutants worsens the effect of SARS-CoV-2 on mortality. Our objective was investigate this hypothesis by performing an ecological study in five Italian Regions (Piedmont, Lombardy, Veneto, Emilia-Romagna and Sicily) linking all-cause mortality, by province (administrative entities within regions), to atmospheric particulate matter (PM2.5and PM10) nitrous oxide (N2O), ammonia (NH3) and methane (CH4) mainly produced by agricultural activities. Study outcome was c…

PollutantMultivariate statisticsbusiness.industryMortality rateEcological studyParticulatesPopulation densitychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryAgricultureEnvironmental healthEnvironmental scienceNitrogen dioxidebusiness
researchProduct

Missing the rarest: is the positive interspecific abundance–distribution relationship a truly general macroecological pattern?

2009

Lepidopterists have long acknowledged that many uncommon butterfly species can be extremely abundant in suitable locations. If this is generally true, it contradicts the general macroecological pattern of the positive interspecific relationship between abundance and distribution, i.e. locally abundant species are often geographically more widespread than locally rare species. Indeed, a negative abundance–distribution relationship has been documented for butterflies in Finland. Here we show, using the Finnish butterflies as an example, that a positive abundance–distribution relationship results if the geographically restricted species are missed, as may be the case in studies based on random…

Population DensityEcologyRange (biology)EcologyRare speciesBiodiversityBiodiversityInterspecific competitionEnvironmentBiologyClassificationBiological EvolutionAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)LepidopteraSpecies SpecificityCommunity EcologyCommon speciesAbundance (ecology)AnimalsGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesOccupancy–abundance relationshipFinlandPhylogenyMacroecologyBiology Letters
researchProduct

The use of Markovian metapopulation models: a comparison of three methods reducing the dimensionality of transition matrices.

2001

The use of Markovian models is an established way for deriving the complete distribution of the size of a population and the probability of extinction. However, computationally impractical transition matrices frequently result if this mathematical approach is applied to natural populations. Binning, or aggregating population sizes, has been used to permit a reduction in the dimensionality of matrices. Here, we present three deterministic binning methods and study the errors due to binning for a metapopulation model. Our results indicate that estimation errors of the investigated methods are not consistent and one cannot make generalizations about the quality of a method. For some compared o…

Population DensityMathematical optimizationeducation.field_of_studyModels StatisticalMarkov chainResearchPopulationPopulation DynamicsMarkov processPopulation processMetapopulationModels BiologicalMarkov ChainsReduction (complexity)symbols.namesakeDistribution (mathematics)symbolsQuantitative Biology::Populations and EvolutioneducationAlgorithmEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCurse of dimensionalityMathematicsTheoretical population biology
researchProduct

The multiple directions of evolutionary change.

2008

The theory of Punctuated Equilibria challenges the neo-Darwinian tenet that evolution is a uniform process. Recently, an article by Hunt1 has found that directional change during the evolution of a lineage is relatively small (occurring only in 5% of 250 analyzed traits). Of those traits that were shown to follow a trend, size was more likely to show gradual changes, whereas shape changes were more random. Here, we provide a short view of the nature of evolutionary trends, showing that directional change within lineages and among clades provides valuable evolutionary information about the processes involved in their generation. BioEssays 30:521–525, 2008. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Population DensityModels GeneticPunctuated equilibriummedia_common.quotation_subjectLineage (evolution)Genetic DriftEvolutionary changeBiologyBiological EvolutionGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEvolutionary biologyMorphogenesisAnimalsBody SizeEvolutionary informationSelection GeneticClademedia_commonBioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology
researchProduct

Territorial defense, territory size, and population regulation.

2005

The carrying capacity of an environment is determined partly by how individuals compete over the available resources. To territorial animals, space is an important resource, leading to conflict over its use. We build a model where the carrying capacity for an organism in a given environment results from the evolution of territorial defense effort and the consequent space use. The same evolutionary process can yield two completely different modes of population regulation. Density dependence arises through expanding and shrinking territories if fecundity is low, breeding success increases gradually with territory size, and/or defense is cheap. By contrast, when fecundity is high, breeding suc…

Population Densityeducation.field_of_studyResource (biology)EcologyNatural resource economicsReproductionPopulationPopulation DynamicsTerritorialityBiologyFecundityPopulation densityBiological EvolutionModels BiologicalDensity dependencePopulation growthCarrying capacityAnimalseducationTerritorialityEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcosystemThe American naturalist
researchProduct

Genome‐wide survey on three local horse populations with a focus on runs of homozygosity pattern

2022

Purosangue Orientale Siciliano, Sanfratellano and Siciliano represent the Sicilian equine genetic resource. This study aimed to investigate the genetic diversity, population structure and the pattern of autozygosity of Sicilian horse populations using genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data generated with the Illumina Equine SNP70 array. The genotyping data of 17 European and Middle East populations were also included in the study. The patterns of genetic differentiation, model-based clustering and Neighbour-Net showed the expected positioning of Sicilian populations within the wide analysed framework and the close connections between the Purosangue Orientale Siciliano and the…

Population Densityruns of homozygosityGenomeGenotypeHomozygotegenetic diversityGeneral MedicinePolymorphism Single Nucleotideautochthonous horseautochthonous horsesFood AnimalsAnimalsInbreedingAnimal Science and ZoologyHorsesautochthonous horses genetic diversity runs of homozygosity SNPsSNPsJournal of Animal Breeding and Genetics
researchProduct

Effects of forest patch size on physiological stress and immunocompetence in an area-sensitive passerine, the Eurasian treecreeper ( Certhia familiar…

2004

We manipulated the primary brood size of Eurasian treecreepers (Certhia familiaris) breeding in different sized forest patches (0.5-12.8 ha) in moderately fragmented landscapes. We examined the effects of brood size manipulation (reduced, control, enlarged) and forest patch size on physiological stress (heterophil-lymphocyte ratios; H/L), body condition and cell-mediated immunocompetence (phytohaemagglutinin test). Nestlings' H/L ratios were negatively related to forest patch area in control and enlarged broods, whereas no effects were found in reduced broods. The effects of forest patch area were strongest in enlarged broods, which had, in general, twofold higher H/L ratios than control an…

Population DynamicsZoologyEnvironmentPopulation densityGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyTreesSongbirdsStress Physiologicalbiology.animalLeukocytesAnimalsPhytohemagglutininsFinlandreproductive and urinary physiologyPhysiological stressGeneral Environmental SciencePopulation DensityGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyEcologyfungiGeneral MedicineCerthia familiarisbiology.organism_classificationPasserineBroodHabitat destructionLinear Modelsbehavior and behavior mechanismsTreecreeperImmunocompetenceGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesResearch ArticleProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
researchProduct

GENETIC VARIABILITY AND DRIFT LOAD IN POPULATIONS OF AN AQUATIC SNAIL

2004

Population genetic theory predicts that in small populations, random genetic drift will fix and accumulate slightly deleterious mutations, resulting in reduced reproductive output. This genetic load due to random drift (i.e., drift load) can increase the extinction risk of small populations. We studied the relationship between genetic variability (indicator of past population size) and reproductive output in eight isolated, natural populations of the hermaphroditic snail Lymnaea stagnalis. In a common laboratory environment, snails from populations with the lowest genetic variability mature slower and have lower fecundity than snails from genetically more variable populations. This result s…

PopulationSnailsFresh WaterBiologyHost-Parasite InteractionsGenetic driftGenetic variationGeneticsAnimalsGenetic variabilitySexual MaturationeducationFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPopulation Densityeducation.field_of_studyEcologyPopulation sizeReproductionGenetic DriftGenetic VariationSmall population sizeGenetic loadGenetics PopulationMutational meltdownMutationBody ConstitutionTrematodaGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEvolution
researchProduct