Search results for "landscape conservation"

showing 10 items of 783 documents

Effects of human disturbance on cave-nesting seabirds: The case of the storm petrel

2015

We tested the effects of human disturbance in two sub-colonies of Mediterranean storm petrel. We conducted three experiments to measure the capacity of the storm petrels to respond to stress. The part of the colony exposed to human disturbance resulted to be habituated and did not show chronic stress related to anthropogenic disturbance.

Mediterranean climateDisturbance (geology)seabirdMonitoringBreeding periodPhysiologyanimal diseasesPopulationWILD ANIMALSManagement Monitoring Policy and LawECOLOGYBreeding period; Habituation; Human disturbance; Seabird; Stress hormones; Physiology; Ecological Modeling; Nature and Landscape Conservation; Management Monitoring Policy and Lawhuman disturbanceHYDROBATES-PELAGICUS-MELITENSISCavestress hormonesbiology.animalPENGUINSSTRESS-RESPONSEeducationHYDROBATES-PELAGICUS-MELITENSIS; STRESS-RESPONSE; BEHAVIORAL-RESPONSES; WILD ANIMALS; CORTICOSTERONE; PENGUINS; ECOLOGY; BIRDS; HORMONES; PLASMAResearch ArticlesCORTICOSTERONENature and Landscape Conservationgeographyeducation.field_of_studygeography.geographical_feature_categoryExtinctionBIRDSPLASMAbiologyPolicy and LawEcologyEcological ModelingStressorStress hormonesAmbientaleStormSeabirdhabituationManagementSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataHuman disturbanceBEHAVIORAL-RESPONSESHORMONESHabituationSeabird
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Hotspots of species richness, threat and endemism for terrestrial vertebrates in SW Europe

2011

The Mediterranean basin, and the Iberian Peninsula in particular, represent an outstanding “hotspot” of biological diversity with a long history of integration between natural ecosystems and human activities. Using deductive distribution models, and considering both Spain and Portugal, we downscaled traditional range maps for terrestrial vertebrates (amphibians, breeding birds, mammals and reptiles) to the finest possible resolution with the data at hand, and we identified hotspots based on three criteria: i) species richness; ii) vulnerability, and iii) endemism. We also provided a first evaluation of the conservation status of biodiversity hotspots based on these three criteria considerin…

Mediterranean climateEcologyconservationBiodiversitygapportugalMediterranean BasinBiodiversity hotspotGeographynatura 2000spainConservation statusbiodiversity hotspots conservation gap natura 2000 portugal protected areas spainprotected areasSpecies richnessEndemismNatura 2000Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsbiodiversity hotspotsNature and Landscape ConservationActa Oecologica
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The Halaesa landscape (III B.C.) as ancient example of the complex and bio-diverse traditional Mediterranean polycultural landscape.

2014

Southern Europe and the whole Mediterranean area are distinguished by landscape types whose characters result from countless, long and complex cultural and historical processes that developed in an equally complex and varied environment. The Mediterranean rural landscape would keep these same distinctive characteristics until the crisis of the mixed-crops, and the phenomena of urbanization in the nineteen-sixties/ seventies. This paper identifies the characteristics of the Mediterranean polycultural and polyspecific (coltura promiscua) landscape, characterized by the presence of trees (both wild and cultivated), starting from a historical overview of the central Mediterranean. The analysed …

Mediterranean climateHistoryLandscape epidemiologyEcologybusiness.industryCultural landscapeBiodiversityHorticultureLandscape designCultural landscape environmental history landscape pattern land use agro-silvo-pastoral systems material and non-material heritage SicilySettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeGeographySpecies richnessEnvironmental historybusinessLandscape archaeologyNature and Landscape Conservation
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Diet and diving behaviour of European Storm Petrels Hydrobates pelagicus in the Mediterranean (ssp. melitensis).

2011

Capsule Unlike Atlantic populations, which feed on krill, Mediterranean populations feed mainly on pelagic fish Gymnammodites cicerellus. Aims To determine the diet and dive depth of the Mediterranean subspecies of European Storm Petrels Hydrobates pelagicus melitensis. Methods Analysis of regurgitates of adults arriving at the colony for chick feeding and by determination of dives depth using the capillary tube method. Results The main prey is Gymnammodites cicerellus, a pelagic fish. Storm Petrels dive for their prey and can reach up to 5 m in depth. They also make short foraging trips just outside the colony where they capture Opossum Shrimps Misydacea. Conclusions European Storm Petrels…

Mediterranean climateKrillbiologyForagingMysidaceaSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaStormPelagic zonebiology.organism_classificationPredationHydrobates pelagicusFisheryGymnammodytes cicerellus diving feeding tripsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservation
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The possible influence of sea level rise on the precarious dunes of Devesa del Saler Beach, Valencia, Spain

1991

The Saler Beach dune field in Spain was partially destroyed between 1970 and 1973 due to building development. Presently great efforts to restore some dunes has begun. The possible consequence of a sea level rise for the Saler dune field is discussed according to different scenarios.

Mediterranean climateOceanographyGeographyEcologySea level riseNature ConservationGeography Planning and DevelopmentNature and Landscape ConservationLandscape Ecology
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Is the Spectacled WarblerSylvia conspicillataexpanding northward because of climate warming?

2014

Capsule The Spectacled Warbler shows a strictly Mediterranean distribution which is expected to expand northward in response to climate warming. To test this hypothesis, we defined the regular distribution of the species based on the literature and we tested whether: (1) spring temperatures in this area significantly increased between 1967 and 2010; (2) breeding attempts north of the regular range occurred progressively at northern latitudes. Both of these hypotheses were confirmed, supporting the hypothesis that the species is expanding northward because of climate warming.

Mediterranean climateRegular distributionGeographybiologyRange (biology)EcologyGlobal warmingbiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSpectacled warblerNature and Landscape ConservationLatitudeBird Study
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Evaluating the ecological effects of Mediterranean marine protected areas: habitat, scale and the natural variability of ecosystems

2000

The capability to detect and predict the responses of marine populations and communities to the establishment of marine protected areas (MPAs) depends on the ability to distinguish between the influences of management and natural variability due to the effects of factors other than protection. Thus, it is important to understand and quantify the magnitude and range of this natural variability at each scale of observation. Here we review the scale of responses of target populations and communities to protection within Mediterranean MPAs, against their ‘normal’ spatio-temporal heterogeneity, and compare those with documented cases from other temperate and tropical marine ecosystems. Additiona…

Mediterranean climateSeascapeEcologyHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisCommunity structureManagement Monitoring Policy and LawPollutionGeographyHabitatEnvironmental monitoringSpatial variabilityEcosystemMarine protected areaNature and Landscape ConservationWater Science and TechnologyEnvironmental Conservation
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Structural analysis of woody species in Mediterranean old fields.

2008

The first part of this study provides an overview on Sicilian olive systems. Subsequently, the study describes the different typologies of cultivated agroforestry systems present in South-Eastern Sicily employing olive trees in association with other Mediterranean tree species, in particular for the production of firewood, coal and animal food (downy or pubescent oak, holm oak, cork oak), but also in association with forage or grazing species (oat, barley, vetch, etc.) or cereals. The study shows that Sicilian agroforestry systems are much more diversified than it was known so far. In the second part, the study describes the spontaneous colonization processes by plants, observed in abandone…

Mediterranean climateSecondary successionEcologyAbandonmentspatial patternPlant ScienceEcological successionVegetationsecondary successionSpatial distributionBasal areaColonisationlandscape conservationGeographyCommon spatial patternSicilyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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An empirical test of neighbourhood effect and safe-site effect in abandoned Mediterranean vineyards

2011

The importance of both neighbourhood effect and safe-site effect for the colonization of Mediterranean old fields by woody plants was investigated. Using a transect approach, we recorded colonization of 21 species of woody plants on abandoned, terraced vineyards on Pantelleria Island (Sicily) in dependence from neighbouring terraces in older succession stages (Maquis) and available safe sites for seedling establishment (former crop plant, terrace wall). With a paired design of four treatments, including presence/absence of adjacent older successional stages, and North-/South-facing slopes, a neighbourhood effect could be shown for both expositions if the transect started from an adjacent fi…

Mediterranean climateSecondary successionTerrace (agriculture)Ecologyfungifood and beveragesEcological successionNeighbourhood effectGeographySettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataOld fieldTransectWoody plants Facilitation Old field Secondary succession Dispersal TerracesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationWoody plantActa Oecologica
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Effects of traditional forest management on carbon storage in a Mediterranean holm oak (Quercus ilex L.) coppice

2018

Abstract: In the last decade, there has been increased interest in measuring and modeling storage in the five forest carbon pools: the aboveground and belowground biomass (living biomass), the deadwood and litter (dead biomass), and the soil (soil organic matter). In this paper, we examined carbon storage in a holm oak coppice stand in the Madonie Mountains in Sicily (Italy), which is a typical case of managed coppice stands. Today, traditional coppice practices are only applied to a small number of forested areas in Sicily, such as the selected site, because of the decline in demand for wood and charcoal. The dendrometric parameters of the stands were recorded, and silvicultural indices we…

Mediterranean climateSettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E Selvicoltura010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesCarbon PoolForest management01 natural sciencesCoppicingBioenergyCarbon Pool Aboveground Carbon Belowground Carbon Dead Carbon Litter Carbon Soil Carbon Coppicinglcsh:ForestryCharcoalSilvicultureCoppicing0105 earth and related environmental sciencesNature and Landscape ConservationEcologySoil organic matterSoil CarbonForestryForestry04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesSoil carbonBelowground CarbonLitter CarbonAboveground Carbonvisual_art040103 agronomy & agriculturevisual_art.visual_art_medium0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental sciencelcsh:SD1-669.5Dead CarboniForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry
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