temporary habitats
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Plants ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 1830
Author(s):  
Irmgard Blindow ◽  
Maria Carlsson ◽  
Klaus van de Weyer

Re-establishment of submerged macrophytes and especially charophyte vegetation is a common aim in lake management. If revegetation does not happen spontaneously, transplantations may be a suitable option. Only rarely have transplantations been used as a tool to support threatened submerged macrophytes and, to a much lesser extent, charophytes. Such actions have to consider species-specific life strategies. K-strategists mainly inhabit permanent habitats, are perennial, have low fertility and poor dispersal ability, but are strong competitors and often form dense vegetation. R-strategists are annual species, inhabit shallow water and/or temporary habitats, and are richly fertile. They disperse easily but are weak competitors. While K-strategists easily can be planted as green biomass taken from another site, rare R-strategists often must be reproduced in cultures before they can be planted on-site. In Sweden, several charophyte species are extremely rare and fail to (re)establish, though apparently suitable habitats are available. Limited dispersal and/or lack of diaspore reservoirs are probable explanations. Transplantations are planned to secure the occurrences of these species in the country. This contribution reviews the knowledge on life forms, dispersal, establishment, and transplantations of submerged macrophytes with focus on charophytes and gives recommendations for the Swedish project.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-32
Author(s):  
E. S. Babushkin

Based on a study of samples made by the author, 70 species of freshwater bivalves belonging to 6 genera and 2 families are recorded for the Taz River basin (north of Western Siberia). An annotated list of bivalves of the Taz basin is provided, with data on species’ range, their findings in Western Siberia and within the studied area. Some information about bionomics and abundance of bivalves are given. 45 species are for the first time registered in this basin. Most studied molluscan communities are characterized by low species richness; the distribution of species by their occurrence was extremely uneven. 22 species are characterized as rare. The highest species richness of bivalves was found in river channels, rivers and brooks; the lowest - in temporary habitats. The core of the fauna is constituted by species with broadest range (cosmopolitan, trans Holarctic, trans Palearctic) as well as by taxa with European Siberian type of distribution. From the taxonomic point of view, the bivalve fauna of the Taz basin is relatively separated from the faunas of other river basins of Western Siberia and is more similar to the fauna of the Lower Yenisean zoogeographic province (sensu Starobogatov [1986]).


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
André Teixeira Silva ◽  
Ricardo Jucá Chagas ◽  
Alexandre Clistenes de Alcântara Santos ◽  
Angela Maria Zanata ◽  
Beatriz Kawamura Rodrigues ◽  
...  

Abstract: This work was carried out from the assessment of the conservation status of the freshwater ichthyofauna from Bahia State. The inventory data and species distribution were obtained from the specialized scientific literature and representative ichthyological collections. A total of 281 native species was recorded in Bahia State, distributed in the Northeastern Mata Atlantica (NMA) and São Francisco (SFR) freshwater ecoregions. There was a larger number of species in the NMA (187 spp.), composed by several coastal basins, than in the SFR (134 spp.), composed by São Francisco river basin. Among the 30 families recorded, Characidae and Rivulidae were the most representative, with 53 and 48 species, respectively. The conservation status of 214 species was assessed and 33 of them (15%) were included in the IUCN threat categories. Of these, 11 species were classified as vulnerable (VU), 12 as endangered (EN), and 10 as critically endangered (CR). Most threatened species (n = 14) belongs to the family Rivulidae. The larger number of threatened species in the NMA: (n = 23) is mainly related to the high endemism of restricted-range species associated with the human occupation impacts along the coastal regions. In the SFR, most of threatened species are annual killifishes, which are locally disappearing due to increasing degradation of their temporary habitats.


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 88
Author(s):  
Martin Schwentner ◽  
Gonzalo Giribet ◽  
David J. Combosch ◽  
Brian V. Timms

The majority of Australian Spinicaudata Linder, 1945 inhabit the (semi)arid deserts of Australia’s lowlands. However, several closely related species of Paralimnadia Sars, 1896 inhabit small temporary habitats throughout the Great Dividing Range in eastern Australia. By combining analyses of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) with double-digest restriction-site associated DNA (ddRAD) data, we studied the species diversity and genetic diversity of this group of mountain-dwelling branchiopods. Levels of genetic differentiation in COI are relatively low between putative species (mostly between 1.5 and 6.7%), complicating COI-based species delimitation. Depending on the applied threshold, three to six species are inferred in the studied area, with most putative species being geographically restricted. Particularly notable are the high levels of population differentiation indicated by ddRAD analyses between nearby populations within putative species. This suggests that gene flow is limited, even between populations separated only by a few kilometres. This may lead to fast population differentiation, which in turn might drive speciation. Our data suggest that the species diversity of Paralimnadia in the Great Dividing Range is much higher than currently appreciated.


Author(s):  
Marco Liberato ◽  
Helena Santos ◽  
Nuno Santos

This paper presents and discusses two cases of sunken featured buildings in Tagus Valley region. The pottery recovered in association with the structures is similar to the productions of central e northern provinces of the Iberian Peninsula, where Islamic influences were tenuous or even non-existent. Both the typology of these contexts and the likely origin of their builders, allows us to equate their correspondence with temporary habitats of newcomers ready to settle after the Christian conquest of the area, in the XIIth century. In conclusion, we are probably dealing with the material record of the human element that supported the progressive implementation in this region of a different social formation, promoting new formulas of territorial control.


2019 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 498-513 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claire Duchet ◽  
Shomen Mukherjee ◽  
Meital Stein ◽  
Matthew Spencer ◽  
Leon Blaustein

2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 269-277 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karl-Olof Bergman ◽  
Joseph Burman ◽  
Dennis Jonason ◽  
Mattias C. Larsson ◽  
Nils Ryrholm ◽  
...  

AbstractBurnet moths (Zygaena spp.) are day-flying Lepidoptera considered indicative of species-rich grasslands. In the present study, our aim was to clarify whether clear-cuts are habitat, supporting habitat or matrix for three species of Zygaena. We did so by sampling these species with sex pheromones on 48 clear-cuts, varying in amount of host and nectar plants, in southern Sweden. To compare the efficiency of such sampling, we also conducted transect walks on these clearcuts. Overall, host-plants on clear-cuts best explained the abundance of Zygaena spp. recorded, better than nectar-plants or connectivity with nearby grasslands. These results indicate that clear-cuts with an abundance of host plants are used as a fully functional habitat, and not a supporting habitat in the sense of only providing nectar. There is no support in these results for considering clear-cuts as an inert matrix. With about half the work-effort, pheromone traps recorded 100 times more Zygaena spp. as transect walks. The poor correspondence between observations during transects walks and pheromone trap catches suggest Zygaena spp. being difficult to monitor by transect walks. In contrast to grasslands, clear-cuts are short-term in nature requiring repeated recolonization, indicating the importance of permanent grasslands. However, clear-cuts are important temporary insect habitats due to their great acreage, and suitable management can increase the time they remain a habitat.


Author(s):  
Mihir R. Kulkarni ◽  
Kalpana Pai

<p>The diversity of many invertebrate taxa from Western Ghats of Maharashtra remains unknown due to lack of systematic studies. We studied freshwater calanoid copepods from this region, and found eleven species of diaptomid copepods in 180 samples collected from 80 sites in the study area. Most of these are new records for this region. The observed fauna includes Oriental, Gondwanan, Palaearctic and Indian endemic taxa. Locality data for all the observed species, along with notes on some ecological aspects of the sampled sites are provided. Non-parametric estimates of species richness for the region suggested an overall adequacy of sampling effort, and probable missing out of some species from habitats with longer hydroperiod. Hydroperiod, depth, electrical conductivity, altitude, mean annual temperature and latitude largely influenced the distribution of species in the study area. Co-occurrences of species were overall rare but more common in temporary habitats. Assemblages of diaptomid copepods restricted to certain sites were identified. The importance of temporary habitats is discussed in the light of their species richness, faunal composition and the increasing anthropogenic pressures they face.</p>


PLoS ONE ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. e0127743 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Frouz ◽  
Pavel Kindlmann

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