Spatial and temporal variation in patch occupancy and population density in a model system of an arctic Collembola species assemblage

Oikos ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 105 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rolf A. Ims ◽  
Hans Petter Leinaas ◽  
Steve Coulson
Author(s):  
R.S.K. Barnes

The soft-sediment marine benthos is well-known to be patchily distributed. To test whether this could be caused by individual epifaunal movement, spatial and temporal variation in numbers of adult mudsnails, Hydrobia ulvae, were analysed within an area of 40 m2 on an intertidal mudflat over periods of 4 or 6 d on three occasions, two of spring tides and one of neap. Significant spatial variation was always present, and significant temporal variation occurred during the spring tides. There was no variation dependent on the numbers of replicate samples taken from each station. Furthermore, movement of large, individually marked winkles, Littorina saxatilis, in the same habitat was measured and shown to be significantly directional over three series of spring tides, although the mean angle of movement varied widely between the different tidal series; storm-induced movement was particularly large. Such directional movement could account for the temporal and spatial variation seen in H. ulvae. Distances moved by winkles under permanently submerged conditions, however, did not display any directional component. Estimates of the population density and dispersion of potentially mobile or movable, intertidal epibenthos obtained on a series of individual, widely spaced days must therefore be treated with caution, however much replicated on any given occasion.


1989 ◽  
Vol 46 (8) ◽  
pp. 1392-1395 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert C. Bailey ◽  
Roger H. Green

A population of Anodonta grandis (Bivalvia; Unionidae) in a small Arctic lake was sampled in 1973 and 1986. In both of the years sampled there were about 14 times more mussels in deep (> 1.5 m) water than in shallow Water There was a decline in growth rate, a shift towards an older age structure, and a drop in population density from 2.3 to 0.65 animals per∙m−2 between 1973 and 1986. This pattern is consistent with an hypothesis of anthropogenic impact. The limitations of such an interpretation are discussed.


Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (13) ◽  
pp. 1798
Author(s):  
Xu Wu ◽  
Su Li ◽  
Bin Liu ◽  
Dan Xu

The spatio-temporal variation of precipitation under global warming had been a research hotspot. Snowfall is an important part of precipitation, and its variabilities and trends in different regions have received great attention. In this paper, the Haihe River Basin is used as a case, and we employ the K-means clustering method to divide the basin into four sub-regions. The double temperature threshold method in the form of the exponential equation is used in this study to identify precipitation phase states, based on daily temperature, snowfall, and precipitation data from 43 meteorological stations in and around the Haihe River Basin from 1960 to 1979. Then, daily snowfall data from 1960 to 2016 are established, and the spatial and temporal variation of snowfall in the Haihe River Basin are analyzed according to the snowfall levels as determined by the national meteorological department. The results evalueted in four different zones show that (1) the snowfall at each meteorological station can be effectively estimated at an annual scale through the exponential equation, for which the correlation coefficient of each division is above 0.95, and the relative error is within 5%. (2) Except for the average snowfall and light snowfall, the snowfall and snowfall days of moderate snow, heavy snow, and snowstorm in each division are in the order of Zones III > IV > I > II. (3) The snowfall and the number of snowfall days at different levels both show a decreasing trend, except for the increasing trend of snowfall in Zone I. (4) The interannual variation trend in the snowfall at the different levels are not obvious, except for Zone III, which shows a significant decreasing trend.


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