Investigation on the declining Southern Damselfly (Coenagrion mercuriale, Odonata) in a Mediterranean population: survival rate and population size

2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 667-675 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gianandrea La Porta ◽  
Enzo Goretti
1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (1) ◽  
pp. 243-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A. Jett ◽  
James D. Nichols ◽  
James E. Hines

The possible impact on Microtus pennsylvanicus of ground applications of Orthene® insecticide was investigated in old-field habitats in northern Maryland during 1982 and 1983. The treatment grids in 1982 and 1983 were sprayed at 0.62 and 0.82 kg active ingredient/ha, respectively. A capture–recapture design robust to unequal capture probabilities was utilized to estimate population size, survival, and recruitment. Data on reproductive activity and relative weight change were also collected to investigate the effect of the insecticide treatment. There were no significant differences in population size or recruitment between control and treatment grids which could be directly related to the treatment. Survival rate was significantly lower on the treatment grid than on the control grid after spraying in 1983; however, survival rate was higher on the treatment grid after spraying in 1982. Significantly fewer pregnant adults were found on the treatment grid after spraying in 1982, whereas the proportions of voles lactating or with perforate vaginas or open pubic symphyses were slightly higher or remained unchanged during this period. Relative weight change was not affected by the treatment. Results do not indicate any pattern of inhibitory effects from the insecticide treatment. Field application of Orthene® did not have an adverse effect on this Microtus population.


2005 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 333-341 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sławomir Mitrus

AbstractThe European pond turtle (Emys orbicularis) is an endangered species in Poland. From 1998 to 2000, as part of an active protection program for the species in central Poland, 123 one-year-old headstarted individuals were released into their original population. Survival rate in artificial rearing was 0.85. Annual recapture rate of the released turtles during the first year in the wild was 0.24, and during next year 0.43 or higher. For comparable groups of one-year-old turtles the annual recapture rates of wild vs. headstarted were not statistically different, but they were based on small samples. Analysis of the data based on a life table for Emydoidea blandingii and data on survival rate of E. orbicularis to age one suggests that headstarting programs can increase population size only if a large percentage of hatchlings is taken to artificial rearing. However, as we know nothing about behaviour and survivorship of older headstarted turtles, such programs still should be considered as experiments.


1990 ◽  
Vol 240 (1298) ◽  
pp. 231-250 ◽  

Cepaea nemoralis at a site on Fyfield Down, Wiltshire, England, have been surveyed, using mark, release, recapture, for 23 years. The population has morph frequencies that do not appear to match the back­ground. At the start of the survey there was heavy predation by birds, but this soon ceased and the vegetation in the area became more uniform, probably because of the destruction of rabbits by myxomatosis. Over the study period the population fluctuated in size but morph frequencies remained almost unchanged. Variation in recruitment, rather than sur­vival, is responsible for variation in numbers. The morph frequency of captured snails differs between juveniles and adults. We suggest that this effect is due to differences in the extent to which large and small individuals move in the open (exposure). This in turn is due to changes in heating properties as the animals increase in size. If the largest selection pressure affecting morph frequency arises from visual predation, then the lack of predators, and lack of evidence of change in survival rate are consistent with the invariant morph fre­quencies. The extent to which studies of the present kind can detect selection is discussed.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bérces Sándor

A two season capture-recapture study was preformed between 2016-2017, focusing on the Carabus species living in a suburban park (3 hectare) in Budapest, Hungary. Eighty live-capture, non-baited pitfall traps were used in a 3 x 3 m grid in 4 rows and 20 columns, covering almost totally a forested area of 240 m2. Five Carabus species were captured, the most numerous were C. scheidleri, C. ullrichii and C. coriaceus. C. convexus and C. intricatus were captured only a few times. All Carabus species were individually marked and released. Population size and survival rate was estimated only for the C. scheidleri population using POPAN in order to receive gross population size. In total 491 C. scheidleri individuals (251 females and 239 males) were marked. Recapture rate in 2016 and 2017 were 41 and 50 percent for the total population respectively. Estimated population size varied between years, the maximum population size was 680 ± 50 specimen in 2016. In 2017 a population size of 190 ± 16 individuals were estimated. Overwintering of eight C. scheidleri and three C. ullrichii specimen were observed. Less mobile large bodied forest specialist Carabus species living in a relatively small reserve underline the importance of habitat islands in a city.


Author(s):  
O.L. Revutskaya ◽  
M.P. Kulakov ◽  
E.Ya. Frisman

The paper investigates dynamic modes of the predator-prey model with age structure for prey. We use a slight modification of the Nicholson-Bailey model to describe the interaction between predator and prey. We assume the population size is regulated by decreasing juvenile survival rate with growth of age class sizes. Conditions for sustainable coexistence of interacting species are described. It is shown that the coexistence of species becomes possible if there are a transcritical or saddle-node (tangential) bifurcations. Due to the saddle-node bifurcation there is bistability in the system of interacting species: predator either coexists with prey or dies depending on the initial conditions. It is shown that the range of demographic parameters, for which the prey and predator coexist, can significantly increase with growth of survival of adult prey or the proportion of predators born or the prey consumption rate of the predator. We studied the oscillation scenarios of interacting population, influences of reproduction, survival and self-regulation rates of population prey and age-dependent predation as well as variations in the current number on transitions between different dynamic modes. It is shown that an increase in the birth rate of the prey under intraspecific competition can lead to a dynamics destabilization and to oscillations appearance in numbers. Age-dependent predation is shown to be a stabilizing influence. At the same time, with a high birth rate of the prey, the system stability is ensured by the high survival rate of adult prey. It was found that in the model parametric space, both bistability and multistability arises, which are not related to each other. Consequently, even a small variation of the current population size leads to more complex behavior of the interacting species, and can give a significant change in both the observed dynamic mode and the coexistence scenario of the species.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yvan Richard ◽  
Lyndon Perriman ◽  
Chris Lalas ◽  
Edward R. Abraham

Demographic rates, such as annual survival rate, are generally difficult to estimate for long-lived seabirds, because of the length of time required for this kind of study and the remoteness of colonies. However, a small colony of northern royal albatross (Diomedea sanfordi) established itself on the mainland of New Zealand at Taiaroa Head, making possible regular banding and monitoring of its individuals since the first chick fledged, in 1938. Data on the presence/absence of birds, as well as on breeding outcomes, were available for the period from 1989–90 to 2011–12, and included 2128 annual resightings of 355 banded individuals of known age. The main goal of the present study was to estimate the annual survival rate of juveniles, pre-breeders, and adults at Taiaroa Head. These rates were estimated simultaneously in a single Bayesian multi-state capture-recapture model. Several models were fitted to the data, with different levels of complexity. From the most parsimonious model, the overall annual adult survival rate was estimated as 0.950 (95% c.i.: 0.941–0.959). In this model, adult survival declined with age, from 0.976 (95% c.i.: 0.963–0.988) at 6 years, the minimum age at first breeding, to 0.915 (95% c.i.: 0.879–0.946) at 40 years. Mean annual survival of pre-breeders was 0.966 (95% c.i.: 0.950–0.980), and 0.933 (95% c.i.: 0.908–0.966) for juveniles. There was no discernible difference in survival between males and females, and there was no apparent trend in survival over time. Estimates of other demographic rates were also obtained during the estimation process. The mean age at first return of juveniles to the colony was estimated as 4.8 years (95% c.i.: 4.6–5.1), and the mean age at first breeding as 8.9 years (95% c.i.: 8.5–9.3). Because all the birds of the colony were banded, it was possible to estimate the total population size. The number of northern royal albatross present annually at the Taiaroa Head colony has doubled since 1989–90, and the current total population size was estimated to be over 200 individuals. The ratio of the total population size to the number of annual breeding pairs varied from 5 to 12 among years, with an overall mean of 7.65 (95% c.i.: 7.56–7.78), and this high variability highlights the need for a sufficient number of surveys of seabird breeding populations before reliable conclusions on population trends can be made. Although long-term data allowed estimates of demographic rates of northern royal albatross at Taiaroa Head, the location of the colony and the ongoing management by staff mean that the population dynamics may differ from those of the main population on the Chatham Islands.


2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 464-471 ◽  
Author(s):  
David L. Fronczak ◽  
David E. Andersen ◽  
Everett E. Hanna ◽  
Thomas R. Cooper

Abstract Several surveys have documented the increasing population size and geographic distribution of Eastern Population greater sandhill cranes Grus canadensis tabida since the 1960s. Sport hunting of this population of sandhill cranes started in 2012 following the provisions of the Eastern Population Sandhill Crane Management Plan. However, there are currently no published estimates of Eastern Population sandhill crane survival rate that can be used to inform harvest management. As part of two studies of Eastern Population sandhill crane migration, we deployed solar-powered global positioning system platform transmitting terminals on Eastern Population sandhill cranes (n  =  42) at key concentration areas from 2009 to 2012. We estimated an annual survival rate for Eastern Population sandhill cranes from data resulting from monitoring these cranes by using the known-fates model in the MARK program. Estimated annual survival rate for adult Eastern Population sandhill cranes was 0.950 (95% confidence interval  =  0.885–0.979) during December 2009–August 2014. All fatalities (n  =  5) occurred after spring migration in late spring and early summer. We were unable to determine cause of death for crane fatalities in our study. Our survival rate estimate will be useful when combined with other population parameters such as the population index derived from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service fall survey, harvest, and recruitment rates to assess the effects of harvest on population size and trend and evaluate the effectiveness of management strategies.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1079-1080 ◽  
pp. 664-667
Author(s):  
Chun Miao Huang ◽  
Wei Ping Wang

This article gets thepopulation data based on China Population Statistics Yearbook ,and establishes a model for forecasting thegrowth of population grouped by ages. First, a difference equation model invector form is established for urban area, town and rural arearespectively. In equation (I), matrix is determined byfertility rate and survival rate of urban area, townand rural area respectively. The short-term population size predicted from thismodel has calculated the gross population of each year during 2002~2020. The 19data we got were used to generate a function between population size y (hundredmillion) and time x (year) by polynomial fitting : , and the max of this function is y = 1.47121 billion when x= 20, which means that the Chinese total population will peak at 1, 471, 210,000 in 2021.


Author(s):  
О.Л. Ревуцкая ◽  
O.L. Revutskaya

This article develops and investigates a simple mathematical model that simultaneously studies influence of age and sex structure formation and sex ratio on demographic and evolutionary processes. We assume fertility depends on the population sex ratio and is described by the modified harmonic mating function with switching. The population size is regulated by limiting the juvenile survival rate when immature individual survival decreases with growth of sex-age class sizes. We received the conditions for sustainable development of the population in the parametric space of the model. The relationships between the group sizes of newborns and mature females and males are analyzed. The growth of the harem size is shown to result in higher the newborn group size in case of female numerical dominance. The offspring number demonstrates the same tendency as the sex group with the smallest number in the cases of higher female survival rate and higher newborn female proportion, and lower male survival rate. Excessive asymmetry of the sexes is shown to lead to a decrease in reproduction of polygamous species. Complex scenarios of population dynamics are studied. Transitions between different dynamic modes are caused by changes in both population parameters determining birth, survival and self-regulation rates, and the formation process of the mating pairs. The model parametric space is shown to have multistability areas in which the initial condition variation can lead to the realization of one dynamic mode or the other. The multistability is the result of both the system nonlinearity and the complex bifurcation mechanisms, and the changing pair formation principle. Consequently, even a small variation of the current population size changing the sex ratio complicates the population behavior and can give significant change in the dynamic mode observed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 615-622
Author(s):  
António Pereira-Neves

Background: This study aims to validate the psoas muscle area and psoas muscle density as morphometric predictors in cardiovascular and cerebrovascular endpoints in patients with extensive aortoiliac peripheral arterial disease. Methods: A total of 57 patients (55 males, 2 females; mean age 60±8.2 years; range, 35 to 83 years) with Trans-Atlantic Inter-Society Consensus type D lesions who underwent revascularization at two Portuguese tertiary hospitals between January 2013 and July 2019 were retrospectively analyzed. The patients with a recent (<6 months) computed tomography scan prior to the revascularization procedure were included in the study. Both centers offered to their patients open and endovascular repair of aortoiliac peripheral arterial disease. Major adverse cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events and major adverse limb events were evaluated. Results: The median follow-up was 20 months. The mean survival rate was 93±3.4% at 30 days and 62.7±8.6% at 48 months. The discriminative thresholds found in this population were 2,175.8 mm2 for total psoas area and 51.75 Hounsfield unit for psoas muscle density. There was a statistically significant difference in the one-year survival rate (p=0.003 and p=0.291, respectively) and major adverse cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events (p=0.005 and p=0.206, respectively) for total psoas area compared to psoas muscle density. Conclusion: Total psoas area shows a prognostic value for survival and major adverse cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events in this patient population.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document