Search results for "captive"

showing 5 items of 15 documents

A Wireless Mesh Network-based System for Hotspots Deployment and Management

2007

In recent years Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) or hotspots, as they are commonly known, have emerged as a promising networking platform to extend network connectivity in public venues, providing local coverage for Internet applications on the move in urban areas and rural environments. Wireless hotspots using 802.11-based technology have popped up in corporate offices, coffeehouses, airports, restaurants and bookstores worldwide. For all their utility and ease of use the 802.11 wireless protocol, known as WiFi, has become the mobile connectivity mechanism of choice for business people, travelers, villagers, and everyone else. Unfortunately, even with the protocol's ease of use and its…

Wireless mesh networkbusiness.industryComputer sciencecomputer.internet_protocolComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKSLocal area networkWireless WANCaptive portalWirelessWireless Application ProtocolThe InternetTelecommunicationsbusinesscomputerMunicipal wireless networkComputer networkInternational Conference on Networking and Services (ICNS '07)
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The body size of headstarted and wild juvenile European pond turtles (Emys orbicularis)

2018

Headstarting is a popular conservation technique in which animals are raised under artificial conditions, and then released into natural habitat. The objective of this procedure is to grow animals to a size at which they are less vulnerable to predators. However, there is still little empirical evidence for the long-term effectiveness of the technique. Therefore, we compared body size of juvenile “wild” (= not taken to artificial rearing) and headstarted European pond turtles (Emys orbicularis), from two populations (in central and western Poland). Immediately after hatching there were no differences in size of the turtles, but after seven-ten years headstarted turtles were smaller. This so…

captive rearing; conservation; freshwater turtles; growth rates; headstartingRussian Journal of Herpetology
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2014

Captive breeding for conservation purposes presents a serious practical challenge because several conflicting genetic processes (i.e., inbreeding depression, random genetic drift and genetic adaptation to captivity) need to be managed in concert to maximize captive population persistence and reintroduction success probability. Because current genetic management is often only partly successful in achieving these goals, it has been suggested that management insights may be found in sexual selection theory (in particular, female mate choice). We review the theoretical and empirical literature and consider how female mate choice might influence captive breeding in the context of current genetic…

education.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationContext (language use)BiologyAnimal dataMate choiceGenetic driftSexual selectionCaptive breedingGeneticsInbreeding depressionMarketingGeneral Agricultural and Biological ScienceseducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolutionary Applications
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Data from: Does recognized genetic management in supportive breeding prevent genetic changes in life-history traits?

2014

Supportive breeding is one of the last resort conservation strategies to avoid species extinction. Management of captive populations is challenging because several harmful genetic processes need to be avoided. Several recommendations have been proposed to limit these deleterious effects, but empirical assessments of these strategies remain scarce. We investigated the outcome of a genetic management in a supportive breeding for the Houbara Bustard. At the phenotypic level, we found an increase over generations in the mean values of gamete production, body mass and courtship display rate. Using an animal model, we found that phenotypic changes reflected genetic changes as evidenced by an incr…

medicine and health carechlamydotis undulataMedicine21th centuryLife sciencesCaptive Populations
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Pulsed flow-through cultivation of Margaritifera margaritifera : effects of water source and food quantity on the survival and growth of juveniles

2020

AbstractConservation of the endangered freshwater pearl mussel (FPM) includes artificially rearing juveniles, but the pulsed flow-through (PFT) method, enabling the continuous renewal of water and food in culture containers, has not been applied to FPM. This study tested the PFT method in culture of FPM juveniles, and the effect of water source (tap vs well water) and food concentration (mixture of commercial phytoplankton products) on the survival and growth of juveniles. Beaker-specific survival rates varied from 0 to 100% (mean: 34%) and from 0 to 58% (mean: 16%) in the 1st (2-week) and 2nd (10-week) experiment, respectively. In the 1st experiment, juveniles attained statistically signif…

uhanalaiset lajitbiologyMass culturelajiensuojeluWater sourceEndangered speciescaptive breedingendangered speciesAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationjokihelmisimpukkaAnimal scienceTap waterFreshwater pearl musselfreshwater pearl musselPhytoplanktonJuvenileartificial culturevesiviljely (kalatalous)MargaritiferaUnionida
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