scholarly journals Ground beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae) react differently to urbanization than other predator groups in a riparian forest in southern Hungary

2019 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Csaba Eötvös ◽  
Gábor Lövei ◽  
Tibor Magura

Urbanization is one of the most important processes shaping our environment, which causes habitat reduction and alteration which are, in turn, the main reasons for the reduced structural and functional diversity in urbanized environments. Predation is one of the most important ecological functions because of its community-structuring effects. Quantification of predation on invertebrate prey is difficult, because the attacks are mostly cryptic and it is rare when evidence is present. Using dummy prey, which is fixed to a surface, the marks left by predators allows us to identify them. Current evidence indicates that predation pressure is lower in urban than rural areas. According to the natural flow-regime paradigm, extreme events (e.g. floods) constitute a primary adaptive pressure in riparian habitats. We tested the validity of the paradigm in urbanized habitats. Our study site was in and around the city of Szeged (Hungary), along two urbanization gradients selected according to the Globenet protocol along the banks of the river Tisza and Maros. Data collection was conducted from April to October, 2014-2016. Both urbanization gradients included rural, suburban and urban areas, each characterised by an increase in the built up area (0%-25%-50%), intensity of forest management, and visitation rates by city residents. Overall 12672 dummy caterpillars ware placed, 6336 were on the ground level and 6336 on tree trunks. The dummy caterpillars (20 mm long, 3 mm thick) were made of light green plasticine, using a modified garlic press, fixed to the bark of trees or on a suitable surface on the ground with superglue, exposed for 24 h. The marks were identified using a hand-held magnifying glass (10 x). Overall the most active predator group was small mammals, followed by insects and birds. Urban predation activity on ground level, caused mainly by carabid beetles was significantly lower than the suburban or rural ones. Carabid predation pressure was higher in suburban than in rural habitats, while all other predator groups (other insects, birds and small mammals) had a decreasing trend towards urban habitats. This means, that all studied predator groups act according to the Gray’s increasing disturbance hypothesis, while carabid beetles react to urbanization according to Connell’s intermediate disturbance hypothesis. We found no evidence for the natural flow-regime paradigm along the examined urbanization gradients.

Energy ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 190 ◽  
pp. 116260 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeff Opgrand ◽  
Paul V. Preckel ◽  
F.T. Sparrow ◽  
Gregory Thomas ◽  
Daniel P. Loucks

2009 ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
Daren M. Carlisle ◽  
James Falcone ◽  
David M. Wolock ◽  
Michael R. Meador ◽  
Richard H. Norris

2016 ◽  
Vol 573 ◽  
pp. 1492-1502 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantinos Stefanidis ◽  
Yiannis Panagopoulos ◽  
Alexandros Psomas ◽  
Maria Mimikou

2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 15841-15869
Author(s):  
X. A. Yin ◽  
Z. F. Yang ◽  
C. L. Liu

Abstract. In deregulated electricity markets, hydropower portfolio design has become an essential task for producers. The previous research on hydropower portfolio optimisation focused mainly on the maximisation of profits but did not take into account riverine ecosystem protection. Although profit maximisation is the major objective for producers in deregulated markets, protection of riverine ecosystems must be incorporated into the process of hydropower portfolio optimisation, especially against a background of increasing attention to environmental protection and stronger opposition to hydropower generation. This research seeks mainly to remind hydropower producers of the requirement of river protection when they design portfolios and help shift portfolio optimisation from economically oriented to ecologically friendly. We establish a framework to determine the optimal portfolio for a hydropower reservoir, accounting for both economic benefits and ecological needs. In this framework, the degree of natural flow regime alteration is adopted as a constraint on hydropower generation to protect riverine ecosystems, and the maximisation of mean annual revenue is set as the optimisation objective. The electricity volumes assigned in different electricity sub-markets are optimised by the noisy genetic algorithm. The proposed framework is applied to China's Wangkuai Reservoir to test its effectiveness. The results show that the new framework could help to design eco-friendly portfolios that can ensure a planned profit and reduce alteration of the natural flow regime.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan D. Tonkin ◽  
Julian D. Olden ◽  
David. M. Merritt ◽  
Lindsay V. Reynolds ◽  
Jane S. Rogosch ◽  
...  

AbstractOvercoming the challenges of water scarcity will require creative approaches to flow management and modeling approaches that forecast the effects of management actions on multiple ecosystem components simultaneously. Using a mechanistic multispecies modeling approach, we investigated the cross-ecosystem effects of environmental flow regimes designed for specific ecosystem outcomes. We reveal tradeoffs associated with flow regimes targeting riparian vegetation, fishes, and invertebrates. The different frequencies associated with each flow regime in some cases caused non-target ecosystem components to become locally extirpated within short (decadal) timespans. By incorporating multiple flow frequencies (from intraannual-scale pulses to large decadal-scale floods), the natural flow regime enabled a balanced but sub-optimal response of the three ecosystem components (mean 72% of designer flow). Although returning to a natural flow regime may not be possible in highly managed rivers, novel flow regimes must incorporate diverse frequencies inherent to such a regime and accommodate the sometimes conflicting requirements of different taxa at different times.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document