Search results for "Predator"

showing 10 items of 349 documents

The Plant as a Habitat for Entomophagous Insects

2016

Populations of herbivorous insects are naturally consumed by other predacious or predatory insect species. These entomophagous insects are thus plant-dwelling organisms that use the plant for several vital functions and are affected by plant traits at the evolutionary, organism and population levels. Many entomophagous species are used for the biological control of insect pests worldwide. The aim of this chapter is to provide an exhaustive review of mechanisms underlying the interactions between plants and entomophagous insects, including those governing life history traits at the individual level, as well as those acting on population and community structure and dynamics. We detail how pro…

Settore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataVegetation landscapePlant defenceVolatileLearningBehaviourMicroclimatePlant ScienceDevelopmentTri-trophic interactionNectarPredatorParasitoid
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Sizing up the role of predators on Mullus barbatus populations in Mediterranean trawl and no-trawl areas

2019

Abstract Fishing leads to drastic changes in ecosystems with a net loss of predatory biomass. This issue has been evidenced from historical ecological studies and from the evaluation of the effects of effective and large marine protected areas. In two fishery reserves off the northern Sicily coast the red mullet Mullus barbatus underwent an impressive biomass increment and a few piscivores fish species recovered after a trawl ban. The red mullet, more than 20% of all demersal fish in the untrawled areas, represented a huge food resource to its potential predators. By contrasting two trawled and two untrawled gulfs we figured out predator - prey relationships through the use of a combined ap…

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologia0106 biological sciencesMullus barbatusRed mulletBiomass (ecology)Stable isotope analysibiology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyMullus barbatu04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesLophius budegassaFisheryDemersal fishEpinephelus aeneusMediterranean SeaTrawling ban040102 fisheries0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesMarine protected area14. Life underwaterPredator-prey interactionTrophic levelFisheries Research
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ROLE OF BEHAVIOUR IN MARINE ORGANISMS: POTENTIAL EFFECTS UNDER FUTURE OCEAN CONDITIONS.

2021

Over the last 250 years, the intensive burning of fossil fuels along with industrial processes and land uses (e.g. clearing forests and agriculture) has contributed to an increase in atmospheric CO2 from approximately 280 to 410 ppm, with a further increase (from 730 to 1020 ppm) projected by the end of this century. About 30% of the anthropogenic CO2 has been absorbed by the ocean, with a consequent decrease of the ocean’s surface pH causing a phenomenon better known as Ocean Acidification (OA). The average pH of the surface ocean has declined from 8.2 by 0.1 units since pre-industrial times as a result of CO2 emissions and a further reduction of 0.3–0.5 pH units is expected to occur by th…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaBehavioural plasticity parental investment antipredator behaviour reproductive success Ocean acidification global warming fIsh invertebrates
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STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL RESPONSES OF FISH ASSEMBLAGES TO DIFFERENT DRIVERS OF CHANGE

Biotic and abiotic factors synergistically act on natural systems. As a result ecological communities adjust their structural and functional responses to persist in a given area. Worldwide, marine ecosystems have been changing through time with increasing anthropogenic pressure in the last centuries leading to only 13.2% of the total marine environments in a ‘pristine’ state. The consequences of direct and indirect anthropogenic pressures may have on marine organisms can largely differ, with both negative and positive effects of drivers of change of human origin. In the span of three years for my PhD thesis, I performed different experiments with the main goal of examining how direct or ind…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaFish assemblageMesopredator ReleaseOcean AcidificationMarine Protected Area
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Fish-seastar facilitation leads to algal forest restoration on protected rocky reefs

2015

AbstractAlthough protected areas can lead to recovery of overharvested species, it is much less clear whether the return of certain predator species or a diversity of predator species can lead to re-establishment of important top-down forces that regulate whole ecosystems. Here we report that the algal recovery in a Mediterranean Marine Protected Area did not derive from the increase in the traditional strong predators, but rather from the establishment of a previously unknown interaction between the thermophilic fish Thalassoma pavo and the seastar Marthasterias glacialis. The interaction resulted in elevated predation rates on sea urchins responsible for algal overgrazing. Manipulative ex…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaMultidisciplinarybiologyEcologyPopulation DynamicsThalassoma pavoFishesbiology.organism_classificationBiooceanography Ecophysiology Evolutionary ecology Plant ecologyArticleForest restorationPredationFisheryChlorophytaPredatory BehaviorSea UrchinsAnimalsMarthasteriasMarine protected areaEcosystemTube feetPredatorEcosystemScientific Reports
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Modelling strategies for the reduction of fat dormice in northern Italian hazel groves

2018

The production of hazelnuts represents an important resource for several Italian rural areas. Sicily and Piedmont, two of the most important producers of hazelnuts, are affected by the presence of the dormouse (Glis glis), that has considerably severely harmed the production of hazelnuts. This study aims to analyse the issue in the Province of Cuneo in Piedmont and to evaluate the sustainability of the policies implemented by using the system dynamics (SD) methodology. An SD predator-prey microworld was built to reproduce the main relevant cause and effect relationships between the development of the dormouse population and local hazelnut production. The results of the SD microworld simulat…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaPopulationmodel forestManagement Monitoring Policy and LawPredator-prey microworlddynamic modelSettore SECS-P/06 - Economia Applicataedible dormousedynamic sustainabilitySystems analysiSettore SECS-P/07 - Economia Aziendalebiology.animalSettore AGR/01 - Economia Ed Estimo RuralehazelnutCasual loop diagramFlow diagramDormousestock and flow diagrameducationagricultureEdible dormouseeducation.field_of_studysystems dynamicEcologybiologyLand usebusiness.industryAgroforestryFat dormouseSettore ING-IND/35 - Ingegneria Economico-Gestionalebiology.organism_classificationBioeconomicsGeographyAgricultureSustainabilityStockRural areacasual loop diagramsbusinessAgronomy and Crop ScienceInternational Journal of Agricultural Resources, Governance and Ecology
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Crushing predation of the spiny star Marthasterias glacialis upon the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus

2009

Literature data report that only fish predators are able to crush sea urchin tests in Mediterranean rocky reefs. This experimental study showed that the spiny star Marthasterias glacialis is able to break Paracentrotus lividus tests and that the breaking event is more likely to occur for small-sized sea urchins than for big ones. Our results show that the role of M. glacialis in regulating P. lividus population density can be important in specific locations. They may have important implications, moreover, for the use of tethering techniques aimed at identifying predator types of sea urchins.

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologiageographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyurogenital systemEcologySettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaAquatic ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationPopulation densityParacentrotus lividusPredationMediterranean seabiology.animalembryonic structuresMarthasteriasPredatorSea urchinReefMediterranean sea sea urchins predationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMarine Biology
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Predator population depending on lemming cycles

2016

In this paper, a Langevin equation for predator population with multiplicative correlated noise is analyzed. The noise source, which is a nonnegative random pulse noise with regulated periodicity, corresponds to the prey population cycling. The increase of periodicity of noise affects the average predator density at the stationary state.

Settore FIS/02 - Fisica Teorica Modelli E Metodi MatematiciPopulationDead-time-distorted Poisson proceDead-time-distorted Poisson process; Langevin equation; Noise in biological systems; population dynamics; Condensed Matter Physics; Statistical and Nonlinear PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicNoise in biological system01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmasLangevin equation0103 physical sciencesQuantitative Biology::Populations and EvolutionStatistical physics010306 general physicseducationPredatorMathematicsPulse noiseeducation.field_of_studyStochastic processMultiplicative functionStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsCondensed Matter Physicspopulation dynamicLangevin equationNoiseStationary state
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Analysis of the Allee threshold via moving least square approximation

2016

Cooperation is a common behavior between the members of predators species, because it can improve theirs skill in hunt, especially in endangered eco-systems. This behavior it is well known to induce the Strong Allee effect, that can induce the extinction when the initial populations’ is under a critical density called ”Allee threshold ”. Here we investigate the impact of the pack hunting in a predator-prey system in which the predator suffers of an infectious disease with frequency and vertical transmission. The result is a three dimensional system with the predators population divided into susceptible and infected individuals. Studying the system dynamics a scenario was identified in which…

Settore MAT/08 - Analisi Numericameshless approximationpredator-prey modeldynamical systembasins of attraction
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THE EFFECT OF ALTERNATIVE PREY ON THE DYNAMICS OF IMPERFECT BATESIAN AND MÜLLERIAN MIMICRIES

2004

Both Batesian and Müllerian mimicries are considered classical evidence of natural selection where predation pressure has, at times, created a striking similarity between unrelated prey species. Batesian mimicry, in which palatable mimics resemble unpalatable aposematic species, is parasitic and only beneficial to the mimics. By contrast, in classical Müllerian mimicry the cost of predators' avoidance learning is shared between similar unpalatable co-mimics, and therefore mimicry benefits all parties. Recent studies using mathematical modeling have questioned the dynamics of Müllerian mimicry, suggesting that fitness benefits should be calculated in a way similar to Batesian mimicry; that i…

Sexual mimicryFood ChainPopulationObservationAposematismBiologyModels BiologicalMüllerian mimicryPredationSongbirdsAvoidance LearningGeneticsAggressive mimicryAnimalsSelection GeneticeducationFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicseducation.field_of_studyEcologyBatesian mimicryPhenotypeEvolutionary biologyPredatory BehaviorLinear ModelsMimicryGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEvolution
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