local species
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

438
(FIVE YEARS 163)

H-INDEX

37
(FIVE YEARS 6)

Author(s):  
Mozzamil Mohammed ◽  
Bernd Blasius ◽  
Alexey Ryabov

AbstractThe dynamics of trait-based metacommunities have attracted much attention, but not much is known about how dispersal and spatial environmental variability mutually interact with each other to drive coexistence patterns and diversity. Here, we present a spatially explicit model of competition for two essential resources in a metacommunity on a one-dimensional environmental gradient. We find that both the strength of dispersal and the range of spatial environmental variability affect coexistence patterns, spatial structure, trait distribution, and local and regional diversity. Without dispersal, species are sorted according to their optimal growth conditions on the gradient. With the onset of dispersal, source-sink effects are initiated, which increases the effects of environmental filtering and interspecific competition and generates trait lumping, so that only a few species from an environment-defined trait range can survive. Interestingly, for very large dispersal rates, species distributions become spatially homogeneous, but nevertheless two species at the extreme ends of the trade-off curve can coexist for large environmental variability. Local species richness follows a classic hump-shaped dependence on dispersal rate, while local and regional diversity exhibit a pronounced peak for intermediate values of the environmental variability. Our findings provide important insights into the factors that shape the structure of trait-based metacommunities.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anton M. Potapov ◽  
Carlos A. Guerra ◽  
Johan van den Hoogen ◽  
Anatoly Babenko ◽  
Bruno C. Bellini ◽  
...  

Soil life supports the functioning and biodiversity of terrestrial ecosystems1,2. Springtails (Collembola) are among the most abundant soil animals regulating soil fertility and flow of energy through above- and belowground food webs3-5. However, the global distribution of springtail diversity and density, and how these relate to energy fluxes remains unknown. Here, using a global dataset collected from 2,470 sites, we estimate total soil springtail biomass at 29 Mt carbon (threefold higher than wild terrestrial vertebrates6) and record peak densities up to 2 million individuals per m2 in the Arctic. Despite a 20-fold biomass difference between tundra and the tropics, springtail energy use (community metabolism) remains similar across the latitudinal gradient, owing to the increase in temperature. Neither springtail density nor community metabolism were predicted by local species richness, which was highest in the tropics, but comparably high in some temperate forests and even tundra. Changes in springtail activity may emerge from latitudinal gradients in temperature, predation7,8, and resource limitation7,9,10 in soil communities. Contrasting temperature responses of biomass, diversity and activity of springtail communities suggest that climate warming will alter fundamental soil biodiversity metrics in different directions, potentially restructuring terrestrial food webs and affecting major soil functions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (43) ◽  
pp. 134
Author(s):  
Amani Abdou ◽  
Karim Saley ◽  
Mahamane Ali ◽  
Ichaou Aboubacar

Les banquettes sylvopastorales constituent l’une des techniques les plus utilisées au Niger pour restaurer les terres dégradées de plateaux. La présente expérimentation a été réalisée sur un plateau dégradé de Simiri dans l’Ouest nigérien où des banquettes sylvopastorales ont été installées. L’objectif est d’évaluer la survie et la croissance des plants de quatre essences locales de Combretaceae, Combretum glutinosum, Combretum micranthum, Combretum nigricans et Guiera senegalensis. Les méthodes utilisées ont consisté d’abord à délimiter un espace sur le plateau dégradé où 40 banquettes sont confectionnées et un autre espace sans banquette pour servir de témoin. Dans les banquettes, 200 plants de chaque espèce ont été plantés à raison de 20 plants/banquette. Deux mois après la plantation un suivi périodique de l’humidité du sol et des paramètres dendrométriques des plants a été effectué durant 30 mois. Les paramètres dendrométriques mesurés sont le taux de survie, la hauteur et le diamètre au collet du grand axe caulinaire, le nombre de rejets et de feuilles. Les résultats obtenus ont montré d’une part que les banquettes améliorent les conditions hydriques du sol de 18,19 % par rapport à la zone non traitée (sans banquette) et d’autre part que les meilleurs taux de survie et de croissance ont été observés au niveau des espèces Guiera senegalensis, Combretum. glutinosum et Combretum. micranthum. Ainsi, les espèces Guiera senegalensis, Combretum glutinosum et Combretum micranthum peuvent être utilisées dans le reboisement de sites aménagés avec des banquettes sylvopastorales pour restaurer les terres de plateaux au Niger Silvopastoral banquettes are one of the techniques mostly used in Niger to restore degraded plateau lands. The present experiment was carried out on a degraded Simiri plateau in western Niger where silvopastoral banquettes have been installed. The objective is to assess the survival and growth of plants of four local species of Combretaceae, Combretum glutinosum, Combretum micranthum, Combretum nigricans, and Guiera senegalensis. The methods used consisted first of delimiting a space on the degraded plateau where 40 banquettes are made and another space without a banquette to serve as a control zone. In the banquettes, 200 plants of each species were planted at 20 plants/banquette. Two months after planting, periodic monitoring of soil moisture and dendrometric parameters of the plants was carried out for 30 months. The dendrometric parameters measured are the survival rate, the height and the collar diameter of the stem axis, the number of suckers and leaves. The results obtained showed on the one hand that the banquettes improve the water conditions of the soil by 18.19% compared to the untreated zone (without banquettes) and on the other hand that the best survival and growth rates were observed at the level of the species Guiera senegalensis, Combretum. glutinosum and Combretum. micranthum. Thus, Guiera senegalensis, Combretum glutinosum, and Combretum micranthum species can be used in the reforestation of sites developed with silvopastoral banquettes to restore plateau lands in Niger.


Author(s):  
Владимир Михайлович Самсонов ◽  
Игорь Владимирович Талызин ◽  
Владимир Владимирович Пуйтов ◽  
Сергей Александрович Васильев

Во введении представлен краткий критический обзор имеющихся интерпретаций температуры Таммана, обычно определяемой как T = 0,5T, и температуры Хюттига T = 0,3T, где T - макроскопическое значение температуры плавления материала. Для наночастиц предложено в указанных выше определяющих соотношениях заменить T на температуру плавления малого объекта T, т.е. определить T как 0,5T, а T как 0,3T. В молекулярно-динамических экспериментах на наночастицах Au, осуществленных с помощью LAMMPS, было установлено, что при температуре T=T как в центральной части ГЦК-наночастицы, так и в её поверхностном слое возникают локальные очаги квазикристаллической структуры, которые попеременно идентифицируются программой OVITO то как имеющие кристаллическую структуру, то как не имеющие кристаллической упорядоченности. Однако, вопреки мнению Э. Рукенштейна (1984), при T=T жидкий слой на поверхности кристаллической наночастицы еще не образуется. Вместе с тем в наших молекулярно-динамических экспериментах не обнаружено какое-либо проявление температуры Хюттига T в структуре кристаллических наночастиц Au. The introduction provides a brief critical review of the available definitions and interpretations of the Tamman temperature, usually defined as T = 0,5T, and of the Hüttig temperature T = 0,3T where T is the macroscopic value of the melting point of the material. For a nanoparticle we propose to replace in the above relations T by the melting temperature of the small object T , i.e. to define T as 0,5T and T as 0,3T . In our molecular dynamics experiments on Au nanoparticles, carried out using the LAMMPS program, we found that at the temperature T = T , in both the central part of the fcc nanoparticle (the core) and in its surface layer (the shell), some local species of a quasicrystalline structure appear which are alternately identified either as crystalline or as non-crystalline by the OVITO program. However, contrary to opinion of E. Rukenstein (1984), at T = T , a liquid layer on the surface of the crystalline nanoparticle is not formed yet. However, a liquid-like layer was gradually developed in the course of the further temperature elevation. At the same time, in our molecular dynamics experiments we did not reveal any manifestation of the Huttig temperature T in the structure of crystalline Au nanoparticles reproduced in our molecular dynamics experiments. It is also of interest that in our molecular dynamics experiments the nanoparticle sintering took place not only above the Tammann temperature but below it as well.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leandro Duarte ◽  
Gabriel Nakamura ◽  
Vanderlei Debastiani ◽  
Renan Maestri ◽  
Maria Joao Veloso da Costa Ramos Pereira ◽  
...  

Ecologists often agree on the importance of macroevolution for niche-mediated distribution of biological diversity along environmental gradients. Yet, macroevolutionary diversification and dispersal in time and space generate uneven geographic distribution of phylogenetic pools, which affects the imprint let by macroevolution on local species pools. In this article we introduce an individual-based simulation approach coupled to Approximate Bayesian Computation (ABC) that allows to parameterize the adaptation rate of species niche positions along the evolution of a monophyletic lineage, and the intensity of dispersal limitation, associated with the distribution of biological diversity between assemblages potentially connected by dispersal (metacommunity). The analytical tool was implemented in an R package called mcfly. We evaluated the statistical performance of the analytical framework using simulated datasets, which confirmed the suitability of the analysis to estimate adaptation rate and dispersal limitation parameters. Further, we evaluated the role played by niche evolution and dispersal limitation on species diversity distribution of Phyllostomidae bats across the Neotropics. The framework proposed here shed light on the links between niche evolution, dispersal limitation and the distribution of biological diversity, and thereby improved our understanding of evolutionary imprints on ecological patterns. Perhaps more importantly, it offers new possibilities for solving the eco-evolutionary puzzle.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Harith Farooq ◽  
Cláudio Bero ◽  
Yolanda Guilengue ◽  
Clementina Elias ◽  
Yasalde Massingue ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Species with direct uses, such as sources of food, shelter, building material and medicine tend to have more specific local names. But could the same apply for species that people fear? Methods To address this question, here we explore the behavior and perception of species diversity and dangerousness through a survey of 1037 households in nine villages in Cabo Delgado, northern Mozambique. We compare people’s knowledge of snakes with that of lizards and amphibians. Results We find that northern Mozambicans know four to five times more local names for snakes than for lizards and frogs, despite the local species richness of snakes being comparable to the diversity of lizards and frogs. We further find that local knowledge was on par with the academic literature regarding snakebite symptoms. Conclusions Our results suggest that fear can increase the level of specificity in naming species among indigenous communities, which could lead to biases in the mapping and protection of species that include data from citizen reports.


Fishes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 69
Author(s):  
Peter W. Sorensen

Across the globe, dozens of species of invasive fish are now found in fresh as well as marine waters, where they alter habitats, compete with native fish for food, and prey on native fishes, exerting both indirect and direct effects on ecosystems and economies. While efforts to understand and control these species are growing, most are still in their infancy; however, a few examples stand out. This special issue is comprised of 11 notable articles on freshwater invasive fish and is the first to address this topic. This introductory article serves as an introduction to these articles which focus on 5 topics on invasive freshwater fish: (1) the damage they cause (one article); (2) techniques to ascertain their presence (one article); (3) techniques to restrict their movement (one article); (4) strategies to control them (three articles); and (5) lessons learned from ongoing management efforts (five articles). This introduction notes that successful management efforts share a few approaches: (1) they develop and use a deep understanding of local species and their abundance as well as distribution; (2) they focus on reducing reproductive success; (3) they use multiple complimentary control strategies; and (4) they use a long-term approach.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nataliya Kuznetsova ◽  
Anna Bokova ◽  
Alexander Kuprin ◽  
Mikhail Potapov ◽  
Yulia Shveenkova ◽  
...  

The diversity of soil animals of relict forest ecosystems in East Asia continues to be insufficiently studied and almost not represented in international databases, including GBIF. This article is based on 7550 records of 175 species which were collected in Ussuriiskii, Sikhote-Alinskii and Kedrovaya Pad’ natural reserves of Russian Far East in 2016–2017. A multi-scale sampling design allowed us to estimate population densities and local species richness of Collembola at areas of different sizes. The work continues the digitization of the collections of the Moscow Pedagogical State University (MPSU) and their publication through GBIF.org, which began in 2019. This article is based on original data including 2377 specimens of springtails from eight forests and 648 soil cores. Within the framework of modern taxonomy, this work represents the first publication of lists of Collembola species of forests of Primorsky Krai. The work focused on the relict protected cedar-deciduous forests. Nine species new to science were described and data on the fauna of the region were significantly revised. Considerable contribution was made to the biogeography of Collembola of East Asia. The design of the sampling allowed us to draw conclusions about the species saturation of springtails at various spatial scales within the habitat: from a few square cm to 100 sq. m. Number of species reached record high values reflecting the benchmark state of Collembola communities of undisturbed old temperate forest ecosystems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 1355-1368
Author(s):  
Jean-François Mboumba ◽  
Brice Roxan Momboua ◽  
Eline Perin ◽  
Fréderic Ysnel

Les savanes gabonaises connaissent des feux anthropiques récurrents, entraînant des dommages sur cet écosystème. L’influence de ce facteur sur la diversité des micromammifères n’a jamais été étudiée. Une situation préoccupante pour ce taxon qui fait l’objet de très peu de programmes de protection. A travers l’analyse de la distribution spatiale des espèces (Muridés), l’étude vise à mesurer l’empreinte écologique des activités anthropiques dans trois régions du Gabon, présentant des niveaux de perturbations différents. Au total 259 individus appartenant à six espèces de muridés ont été capturés avec un effort de 6220 nuit-pièges. Les rendements de capture varient de 0,5 à 15%. Mus minutoides (62,5%) et Lemniscomys striatus (28.9%) sont les plus abondantes. La richesse spécifique (S) varie de 1 à 4 espèces dans les savanes post -feu, alors qu’elle est de 5 dans les savanes protégées des feux, et de 2 espèces dans les savanes fauchées puis brulées. La diversité la plus élevée a été observée dans les savanes non exposées au feu (H’= 1,10 ; J= 0,68). Ceci atteste que le feu influe sur l’abondance, et lorsqu’il est préalablement associé à la fauche, il agirait à la fois sur la diversité et sur l’abondance d’espèces locales.   English title: Influence of human disturbance to the small mammal communities in the Gabonese savannahs In the issue of the use of recurrent fires in Gabon, we carried out an inventory both in the Gabonese savannahs that are regularly burned and in those that are not. The study was carried out in the southern and central savannahs of Gabon during the periods from 2004, 2012 and 2013. A total of 259 individuals representing six species of small savannah rodents were captured over 6,220 trap nights. Trap success was variable (0.5 to 15%). Mus minutoides (62.5%) and Lemniscomys striatus (28.9%) are the most abundant. Small rodent abundance was significantly higher in the savannahs protected from fires. The species richness varies from 1 to 4 species in the post-fire savannahs and up to 5 species in the savannahs protected from fires. The savannahs that were mowing prior to burning have yielded only 2 species. The highest diversity index (H’) is found in savannahs not exposed to fire (H’= 1.10). Bush fires seem to have a direct effect on species abundance. Conversely, when savannahs are mown prior to burning, both the diversity and abundance of local species communities are affected. This study gave an initial idea of the diversity of the rodent population in this the recurrent use to fires.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document