Intensive trapping and increased fish predation cause massive population decline of an invasive crayfish

2007 ◽  
Vol 52 (6) ◽  
pp. 1134-1146 ◽  
Author(s):  
CATHERINE L. HEIN ◽  
M. JAKE VANDER ZANDEN ◽  
JOHN J. MAGNUSON
1989 ◽  
Vol 46 (6) ◽  
pp. 910-922 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. J. Davies

A population of Orconectes virilis in Lake 223 at the Experimental Lakes Area, northwestern Ontario, was monitored from 1976 to 1982 during an acidification experiment. O. virilis from nearby Lake 240 served as a reference population. Crayfish abundance remained stable as average epilimnion pH was gradually lowered from 6.49 (1976) to 5.93 (1978). In 1979 (pH 5.64) recruitment of young was poor and the overall population size [Formula: see text] fell from 105 800 to 60 300 animals. The decline continued in the complete absence of recruitment during 1980 (pH 5.59, [Formula: see text] and 1981 (pH 5.02, [Formula: see text]. Few crayfish survived until the spring of 1982. None were present from mid-summer 1982 to fall 1983 (average pH 5.09 to 5.13). Hatchling mortality and some egg loss appeared to have been the causes of recruitment failure. Acidification also produced a noticeable softening in the carapace of all intermoult crayfish. Growth, mortality, behaviour, and the basic reproductive functions of juvenile and adult crayfish did not change in response to acidification. Fish predation and the incidence of a microsporidian parasite apparently contributed little to the population decline.


Ecology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 100 (5) ◽  
pp. e02659 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric R. Larson ◽  
Timothy A. Kreps ◽  
Brett Peters ◽  
Jody A. Peters ◽  
David M. Lodge

2009 ◽  
Vol 32 (0) ◽  
pp. 179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Finn Gregersen ◽  
Håkon Gregersen

2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (11) ◽  
pp. 2427-2447
Author(s):  
S.N. Yashin ◽  
E.V. Koshelev ◽  
S.A. Borisov

Subject. This article discusses the issues related to the creation of a technology of modeling and optimization of economic, financial, information, and logistics cluster-cluster cooperation within a federal district. Objectives. The article aims to propose a model for determining the optimal center of industrial agglomeration for innovation and industry clusters located in a federal district. Methods. For the study, we used the ant colony optimization algorithm. Results. The article proposes an original model of cluster-cluster cooperation, showing the best version of industrial agglomeration, the cities of Samara, Ulyanovsk, and Dimitrovgrad, for the Volga Federal District as a case study. Conclusions. If the industrial agglomeration center is located in these three cities, the cutting of the overall transportation costs and natural population decline in the Volga Federal District will make it possible to qualitatively improve the foresight of evolution of the large innovation system of the district under study.


1969 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-226
Author(s):  
Hao-Li Lin

The diverse nature of Fiji’s chiefship and how its supremacy was strengthened by colonialism have already been closely examined. However, few studies have focused on village chiefs, who have limited authority and are at the lower end of regional chiefly hierarchies. Using both historical and ethnographic materials from a Fijian village, I argue here that its “petty chief,” as the role was called by nineteenth-century Westerners, is a powerful linkage to a past of stability represented by the chiefly title. This is particularly important for communities that have experienced historical turbulence. In this case study, it was mainly the measles crisis that caused population decline. The linkage is materialised by a standardised entrance ceremony in which the chiefly title is routinely acknowledged by foreign visitors through offerings (i-sevusevu) and thus elevated to a symbol that holds the community together. I also argue that the entrance ceremony that we observe today may have been prompted by Western contact. Through the analysis of the ceremony and local history, this study shows that the power of “petty chiefs” should be understood not solely by the structure of hierarchy, but also by their significance to historically turbulent communities.


2020 ◽  
Vol 105 (3) ◽  
pp. 281-299
Author(s):  
Javier Carreño-Barrera ◽  
Luis Alberto Núñez-Avellaneda ◽  
Maria José Sanín ◽  
Artur Campos D. Maia

Solitary, dioecious, and mostly endemic to Andean cloud forests, wax palms (Ceroxylon Bonpl. ex DC. spp.) are currently under worrisome conservation status. The establishment of management plans for their dwindling populations rely on detailed biological data, including their reproductive ecology. As in the case of numerous other Neotropical palm taxa, small beetles are assumed to be selective pollinators of wax palms, but their identity and relevance in successful fruit yield were unknown. During three consecutive reproductive seasons we collected data on population phenology and reproductive and floral biology of three syntopic species of wax palms native to the Colombian Andes. We also determined the composition of the associated flower-visiting entomofauna, quantifying the extent of the role of individual species as effective pollinators through standardized value indexes that take into consideration abundance, constancy, and pollen transport efficiency. The studied populations of C. parvifrons (Engel) H. Wendl., C. ventricosum Burret, and C. vogelianum (Engel) H. Wendl. exhibit seasonal reproductive cycles with marked temporal patterns of flower and fruit production. The composition of the associated flower-visiting entomofauna, comprised by ca. 50 morphotypes, was constant across flowering seasons and differed only marginally among species. Nonetheless, a fraction of the insect species associated with pistillate inflorescences actually carried pollen, and calculated pollinator importance indexes demonstrated that one insect species alone, Mystrops rotundula Sharp, accounted for 94%–99% of the effective pollination services for all three species of wax palms. The sequential asynchronous flowering of C. parvifrons, C. ventricosum, and C. vogelianum provides an abundant and constant supply of pollen, pivotal for the maintenance of large populations of their shared pollinators, a cooperative strategy proven effective by high fruit yield rates (up to 79%). Reproductive success might be compromised for all species by the population decline of one of them, as it would tamper with the temporal orchestration of pollen offer.


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