Search results for "Specie"

showing 10 items of 4389 documents

Rapid recovery of invertebrate communities after ecological restoration of boreal mires

2015

Mire degradation due to drainage for forestry results in the loss of mire specialist species. To halt the loss in biodiversity, ecological restoration is needed and already implemented. However, a major challenge in ecological restoration is whether actions taken have the desired outcome. Key abiotic and biotic conditions for the successful restoration of invertebrate communities can be identified by testing the “Field of Dreams” hypothesis, which postulates that if a habitat is successfully restored, species will return. This study was conducted in nine boreal mires located in Eastern Finland, 1–3 years after restoration. Parts of each mire were drained for forestry during the 1960s and 19…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyEcologyVegetation15. Life on landGeneralist and specialist speciesHabitat13. Climate actionMireEnvironmental scienceSpecies richnessTransectBogRestoration ecologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationRestoration Ecology
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Maritime antarctic lakes as sentinels of climate change

2012

Remote lakes, such as lakes from the Maritime Antarctica, can be used as sentinels of climate change, because they are mostly free of direct anthropogenic pressures, and they experience climate change as a main stressor capable of modifying the ecosystem structure and function. In this paper, the content of a lecture that has been presented at the First Conference of Lake Sustainability, which has been centred in our studies on lakes from Byers Peninsula (Maritime Antarctica), are summarized. These included physical, chemical and biological studies of these lakes and other freshwater ecosystems, which highlighted the relevance of biotic interactions for these ecosystems and its sensibility …

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyGlobal warmingEcosystem modellingRegional warmingGeneral EngineeringClimate changeFreshwater ecosystemInvasive speciesPeninsulaSustainabilityClimate changeEnvironmental scienceEcosystemSpecies interactionsBiological invasionsGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesRegional warmingGeneral Environmental ScienceInternational Journal of Design & Nature and Ecodynamics
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Bio-ecological, phytosociological and conservation aspects of relictual and disjointed populations ofSimethis mattiazzi(Vandelli) Sacc. (Xanthorrhoea…

2012

Abstract Two populations of Simethis mattiazzi (Xanthorrhoeaceae) were recently discovered in the Channel of Sicily – (1) Punta Bassana (Marettimo Island) and (2) Mount S. Giuliano (western Sicily) – at a considerable distance from the nearest stations hitherto known, located in southern Sardinia, the Pontine Islands Archipelago and Tunisia. The taxonomical and distributive aspects of this species are analysed to highlight the relictual and biogeographical significance of the disjointed and fragmentary nuclei distributed in several small islands of the Channel of Sicily, the Italian Peninsula and North Africa. Some morphological, biological, ecological and phytosociological aspects of the t…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyPeninsulaBiogeographyArchipelagoRare speciesNorth africaPlant ScienceXanthorrhoeaceaeSimethis mattiazziChannel (geography)Acta Botanica Gallica
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Invasion ecology of the alien tussock grassNardus stricta(Poaceae) at Lake Pukaki, Canterbury, New Zealand

2005

Abstract The European matgrass Nardus stricta has naturalised in New Zealand, often on damp soils within wetlands and grasslands. In this paper, we present for the first time field data on the ecology of this alien invader in New Zealand, from eight kettle‐hole wetlands on lateral moraine along the western side of Lake Pukaki, South Canterbury. The invaded wetland sites were all acidic but varied in other soil characteristics. Nardus stricta was the most dominant species within these wetland communities with 40% of all plots showing more than 50% coverage, and 21% having more than 90% cover. Species richness (including vascular plants and mosses) at some sites was relatively high (c. 40 spe…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyTussockSpecies diversityWetlandPlant ScienceBiologyInvasive speciesAbundance (ecology)BotanyPoaceaeSpecies richnessQuadratEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNew Zealand Journal of Botany
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Habitat type and island identity as drivers of community assembly in an archipelago

2020

Aim: Ecoinformatics offer new opportunity to test islands as biogeographic and eco- logical models. In this paper we predicted three hypotheses: (1) plot-based data issu- ing from vegetation surveys can be used to predict Island Species-Area Relationships (ISARs) or island similarity; (2) the habitat area is an independent predictor of species richness patterns within island; (3) species richness and composition are more de- pendent on habitat type than island identity in land-bridge islands. Area: Tuscan Archipelago, Italy. Methods: We assembled a database of all the vegetation plots available for the archi- pelago. For the first hypothesis we calculated ISARs, using Arrhenius model, and B…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiogeographic patterns islands plot data species-area relationshipsIdentity (social science)islandsPlant Sciencespecies-area relationshipsbiogeographic patternsType (biology)HabitatislandSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataArchipelagobiogeographic patternEthnologyplot data
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Response of wood-inhabiting fungal community to fragmentation in a beech forest landscape

2014

Fragmentation of natural habitats has become one of the main causes of the loss of biodiversity. To assess the effects of forest fragmentation on wood-inhabiting fungal community in a beech-dominated landscape, 15 differently shaped beech forest fragments were examined in northern Spain. This work covers all the wood-inhabiting macromycetes, including Basidiomycota and Ascomycota. A modelling approach was used to examine the predictability of the fungal community in a fragmented beech forest landscape. In the beech forest patches, a large proportion of edge, low tree densities and low levels of variety of woody debris caused a decrease of wood-inhabiting fungal richness. The fungal communit…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyCommunityEcologyAgroforestryEcological ModelingfungiForest managementBiodiversityFragmentation (computing)Plant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationOld-growth forestHabitatta1181Species richnessBeechEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsFungal Ecology
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Zooplankton communities in doline lakes and pools, in relation to some bathymetric parameters and physical and chemical variables

1999

The zooplankton communities from several lakes and pools in three zones of a karstic area in central Spain were studied in spring and early autumn, in relation to morphometric, physical and chemical characteristics of the lakes. Zooplankton diversity was higher in autumn than in spring and it was positively correlated with lake size (area and depth) in spring, but not in early autumn. This effect is partially explained by the sharp zooplankton stratification in deep lakes, in early autumn. Some morphometric characteristics of lake basins were also correlated with the structure of zooplank- ton communities. Principal component analyses (PCA) and Two-Way Indicator Species Analysis (TWINSPAN) …

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyEcologyCommunity structureBranchiopodaSpecies diversityStratification (vegetation)Aquatic ScienceSeasonalitybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseKarstZooplanktonmedicineEnvironmental sciencePhysical geographyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTrophic levelJournal of Plankton Research
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Yet another alien: a second species of Lepisiota spreading across the Canary Islands, Spain (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)

2018

The Canary Islands are a biologically important archipelago hosting many unique species, whose myrmecofauna is peculiarly rich in both endemic and introduced species. Lepisiota frauenfeldi cfr. kantarensis Forel, 1911 is reported for the first time from Fuerteventura and Tenerife. It is the second species of Lepisiota introduced in the archipelago in the last few years, and one of the few documented cases in which Lepisiota frauenfeldi (Mayr, 1855) s.l. acts as a successful tramp species. Comments are also given on taxonomic problems involving the L. frauenfeldi-group and related taxa. Finally, new additional information and comments are presented on the distribution of other alien ants spe…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyEcologyIntroduced speciesAlienbiology.organism_classificationLasius neglectusTaxonLepisiotaMacaronesia Lepisiota frauenfeldi ssp. kantarensis first record myrmecofauna exotic ants invasive ants tramp ants biodiversity conservationInsect ScienceArchipelagolcsh:ZoologyTaxonomy (biology)lcsh:QL1-991ParatrechinaEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Ecological variation between marginal and central populations of Potamogeton polygonifolius, a rare and endangered species in Central Europe

2012

Abstract The present study is focused on Potamogeton polygonifolius – the species considered to be endangered in Germany, the Czech Republic, Poland and Switzerland. Field studies were carried out in Lower Silesia and Lusatia in southwestern Poland in order to verify the present state of the marginal populations of P. polygonifolius, to determine the habitat preferences of the species in the study area, to compare the ecological data between marginal and central populations and finally to recognise the factors constraining the easternmost limit of the P. polygonifolius. In total, 18 populations were examined, and 11 releves were collected. The releves gathered were compared with 95 releves …

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyaquatic plantsRange (biology)Ecologybusiness.industryEndangered speciesconservationDistribution (economics)marginal populationMetapopulationbiology.organism_classificationPotamogeton polygonifoliusPotamogeton polygonifoliusHabitatAquatic plantrangedistributionecologybusinessBogNature and Landscape Conservation
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Inferring True Species Richness and Complete Abundance Distribution in Six Reef-fish Communities from Red-sea, Using the Numerical Extrapolation of I…

2019

Even when ecological communities are incompletely sampled (which is most frequent in practice, at least for species-rich assemblages including many rare species), it remains possible to retrieve much more information than could be expected first, by applying numerical extrapolation to incomplete field data. Indeed, recently developed procedures of numerical extrapolation of partial samplings now allow to estimate, with fair accuracy, not only the number of the still unrecorded species but, moreover, the distribution of abundances of each of these unrecorded species, thereby making available the full range of the Species Abundance Distribution, despite dealing with incomplete data only. In t…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybusiness.industryCoral reef fishExtrapolationSpecies diversityDistribution (economics)General MedicineCoral reefBiologyAbundance (ecology)Species evennessSpecies richnessbusinessAsian Journal of Environment & Ecology
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