The effect of aquatic and terrestrial habitat characteristics on occurrence and breeding probability in a montane amphibian: insights from a spatially explicit multistate occupancy model

2017 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raluca Ioana Băncilă ◽  
Dan Cogălniceanu ◽  
Arpat Ozgul ◽  
Benedikt R. Schmidt
2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Erin R. Zylstra ◽  
Don E. Swann ◽  
Blake R. Hossack ◽  
Erin Muths ◽  
Robert J. Steidl

2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 103-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tibor Erős ◽  
Winsor H. Lowe

Abstract Purpose of Review We synthesize recent methodological and conceptual advances in the field of riverscape ecology, emphasizing areas of synergy with current research in landscape ecology. Recent Findings Recent advances in riverscape ecology highlight the need for spatially explicit examinations of how network structure influences ecological pattern and process, instead of the simple linear (upstream-downstream) view. Developments in GIS, remote sensing, and computer technologies already offer powerful tools for the application of patch- and gradient-based models for characterizing abiotic and biotic heterogeneity across a range of spatial and temporal scales. Along with graph-based analyses and spatial statistical stream network models (i.e., geostatistical modelling), these approaches offer improved capabilities for quantifying spatial and temporal heterogeneity and connectivity relationships, thereby allowing for rigorous and high-resolution analyses of pattern, process, and scale relationships. Summary Spatially explicit network approaches are able to quantify and predict biogeochemical, hydromorphological, and ecological patterns and processes more precisely than models based on longitudinal or lateral riverine gradients alone. Currently, local habitat characteristics appear to be more important than spatial effects in determining population and community dynamics, but this conclusion may change with direct quantification of the movement of materials, energy, and organisms along channels and across ecosystem boundaries—a key to improving riverscape ecology. Coupling spatially explicit riverscape models with optimization approaches will improve land protection and water management efforts, and help to resolve the land sharing vs. land sparing debate.


2011 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jesús Ernesto Arias-González ◽  
Gilberto Acosta-González ◽  
Néstor Membrillo ◽  
Joaquín Rodrigo Garza-Pérez ◽  
José Manuel Castro-Pérez

Author(s):  
Joshua M. Epstein

This part describes the agent-based and computational model for Agent_Zero and demonstrates its capacity for generative minimalism. It first explains the replicability of the model before offering an interpretation of the model by imagining a guerilla war like Vietnam, Afghanistan, or Iraq, where events transpire on a 2-D population of contiguous yellow patches. Each patch is occupied by a single stationary indigenous agent, which has two possible states: inactive and active. The discussion then turns to Agent_Zero's affective component and an elementary type of bounded rationality, as well as its social component, with particular emphasis on disposition, action, and pseudocode. Computational parables are then presented, including a parable relating to the slaughter of innocents through dispositional contagion. This part also shows how the model can capture three spatially explicit examples in which affect and probability change on different time scales.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document