7 results on '"Winfield, I.J."'
Search Results
2. Horizon scanning for invasive alien species with the potential to threaten biodiversity and human health on a Mediterranean island
- Author
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Peyton, J. Martinou, A.F. Pescott, O.L. Demetriou, M. Adriaens, T. Arianoutsou, M. Bazos, I. Bean, C.W. Booy, O. Botham, M. Britton, J.R. Cervia, J.L. Charilaou, P. Chartosia, N. Dean, H.J. Delipetrou, P. Dimitriou, A.C. Dörflinger, G. Fawcett, J. Fyttis, G. Galanidis, A. Galil, B. Hadjikyriakou, T. Hadjistylli, M. Ieronymidou, C. Jimenez, C. Karachle, P. Kassinis, N. Kerametsidis, G. Kirschel, A.N.G. Kleitou, P. Kleitou, D. Manolaki, P. Michailidis, N. Mountford, J.O. Nikolaou, C. Papatheodoulou, A. Payiatas, G. Ribeiro, F. Rorke, S.L. Samuel, Y. Savvides, P. Schafer, S.M. Tarkan, A.S. Silva-Rocha, I. Top, N. Tricarico, E. Turvey, K. Tziortzis, I. Tzirkalli, E. Verreycken, H. Winfield, I.J. Zenetos, A. Roy, H.E.
- Abstract
Invasive alien species (IAS) are one of the major drivers of change that can negatively affect biodiversity, ecosystem functions and services and human health; islands are particularly vulnerable to biological invasions. Horizon scanning can lead to prioritisation of IAS to inform decision-making and action; its scale and scope can vary depending on the need. We focussed on IAS likely to arrive, establish and affect biodiversity and human health on the Mediterranean island of Cyprus. The scope of the horizon scanning was the entire island of Cyprus. We used a two-step consensus-building process in which experts reviewed and scored lists of alien species on their likelihood of arrival, establishment and potential to affect biodiversity, ecosystems and/or human health in the next 10 years. We reviewed 225 alien species, considered to be currently absent on Cyprus, across taxa and environments. We agreed upon 100 species that constituted very high, high or medium biodiversity risk, often arriving through multiple pathways of introduction. The remaining 125 species were ranked as low risk. The potential impacts on human health were documented for all 225 species; 82 species were considered to have a potentially negative impact on human health ranging from nuisance to disease transmission. The scope of the horizon scanning was the entire island of Cyprus, but the thematic groups also considered the relevance of the top 100 species to the Sovereign Base Areas of Cyprus, given their differing governance. This horizon scan provides the first systematic exercise to identify invasive alien species of potential concern to biodiversity and ecosystems but also human health within the Mediterranean region. The process and outcomes should provide other islands in the region and beyond with baseline data to improve IAS prioritisation and management. © 2019, The Author(s).
- Published
- 2019
3. Inter and intra-population phenotypic and genotypic structuring in the European whitefish Coregonus lavaretus, a rare freshwater fish in Scotland
- Author
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Adams, C.E., Bean, C.W., Dodd, J.A., Down, A., Etheridge, E.C., Gowans, A.R.D., Hooker, O., Knudsen, R., Lyle, A.A., Winfield, I.J., and Praebel, K.
- Subjects
Ecology and Environment - Abstract
This study revealed between-lake genetic structuring between Coregonus lavaretus collected from the only two native populations of this species in Scotland, U.K. (Lochs Eck and Lomond) evidenced by the existence of private alleles (12 in Lomond and four in Eck) and significant genetic differentiation (FST = 0·056) across 10 microsatellite markers. Juvenile C. lavaretus originating from eggs collected from the two lakes and reared in a common-garden experiment showed clear phenotypic differences in trophic morphology (i.e. head and body shape) between these populations indicating that these characteristics were, at least partly, inherited. Microsatellite analysis of adults collected from different geographic regions within Loch Lomond revealed detectable and statistically significant but relatively weak genetic structuring (FST = 0·001–0·024) and evidence of private alleles related to the basin structure of the lake. Within-lake genetic divergence patterns suggest three possibilities for this observed pattern: (1) differential selection pressures causing divergence into separate gene pools, (2) a collapse of two formerly divergent gene pools and (3) a stable state maintained by balancing selection forces resulting from spatial variation in selection and lake heterogeneity. Small estimates of effective population sizes for the populations in both lakes suggest that the capacity of both populations to adapt to future environmental change may be limited.
- Published
- 2016
4. Dominance des effets de la densité dépendance par rapport à la température sur les structures en taille de six espèces de poissons des lacs européens
- Author
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Arranz, I.U., Mehner, Thomas, Benejam, L., Argillier, Christine, Holmgren, K., Jeppesen, E., Lauridsen, T.L., Volta, P.J., Winfield, I.J., Brucet, S., Irstea Publications, Migration, UNIVERSITY OF VIC-UCC ESP, Partenaires IRSTEA, Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)-Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA), LEIBNIZ INSTITUTE OF FRESHWATER ECOLOGY AND INLAND FISHERIES BERLIN DEU, Hydrobiologie (UR HYAX), Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA), Institute of Freshwater Research, Department of Aquatic Resources, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU)-Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), DEPARTMENT OF BIOSCIENCE AARHUS UNIVERSITY AARHUS DNK, INSTITUTE OF ECOSYSTEM STUDY VERBANIA PALLANZA ITA, and LAKE ECOSYSTEMS GROUP CENTRE FOR ECOLOGY AND HYDROLOGY LANCASTER GBR
- Subjects
[SDE] Environmental Sciences ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences - Abstract
International audience; Large scale studies on individual size distribution of fish have primarily been done at community level, but little attention is paid at species level. We described fish size structure by using mean size, size diversity and the slope of linear size spectra of six common European fish species to compare whether these metrics responded to the same large-scale continental gradients. As predictors, we included several environmental variables and relative estimates of abundance (catch per unit effort) as indicator of density-dependent effects. We found differences in the strength of the main predictors of size structure between the six species, but the direction of the response was relatively similar and consistent for most of the size metrics. Temperature variations across Europe weakly induced the similar negative response to the size metrics for most species. However, we found an unexpectedly strong density dependence of size structure in all species, resulting in lower mean body size and size diversity and steeper size spectr a slopes. This suggests that the density-dependent effect is so far an underestimated driver of fish size structure
- Published
- 2015
5. Fish introductions and their management in the English Lake District.
- Author
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Winfield, I.J. and Durie, N.C.
- Subjects
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FISHES , *AQUATIC animals , *BIODIVERSITY , *VENDACE , *COREGONUS lavaretus , *ARCTIC char - Abstract
For biogeographical reasons, the English Lake District contains relatively few native fish species although it encompasses 14 major lakes and many smaller water bodies. Nevertheless, it is nationally important for fish biodiversity because of the presence of vendace, Coregonus albula (L.), whitefish, Coregonus lavaretus (L.), and Arctic charr, Salvelinus alpinus (L.), while recreational angling contributes significantly to the local tourism industry. Several recent illegal introductions of fish species have been observed at several lakes, probably as a result of anglers live-baiting for pike, Esox lucius L., including roach, Rutilus rutilus (L.) and ruffe, Gymnocephalus cernuus (L.), where they now threaten native species through competition and predation. As the removal of introduced populations is practically impossible, their management is limited to preventing further introductions. A description is given of legislation introduced in 2002 to achieve this objective by banning the use of live-baits in 14 lakes of high conservation importance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Catalyst for Organizational LearningThe Case of Toyota Motor Manufacturing UK Ltd.
- Author
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Winfield, I.J. and Kerrin, M.
- Abstract
Describes current research on organizational learning and change being conducted in the Midlands region in the UK, centring on the industrial conurbation of Derby. One of the catalysts for the current upsurge in interest in organizational learning within this region has been the arrival of Toyota Motor Manufacturing UK Ltd and the perceived revitalization of the region's economy that this investment is seen to have made. Research at Derby University focuses on ascertaining the degree to which Toyota Ltd can be attributed as being a point source of change for firms learning, emulating and adopting what are known as new wave manufacturing strategies and associated human resource management practices. Discusses and theoretically frames empirically derived results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Predicting the effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals on healthy and disease impacted populations of perch (perca fluviatilis)
- Author
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Brown, A.R., Riddle, A.M., Winfield, I.J., Fletcher, J.M., and James, J.B.
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EUROPEAN perch , *FISH populations , *TOXICITY testing , *LIFE (Biology) - Abstract
Abstract: Long-term data from the perch population of the north basin of Windermere, UK, were combined with effects data from laboratory toxicity studies of survival, growth and reproduction in other species to assess the likely impact on fish populations of different levels of exposure to nonylphenol (NP) and ethinylestradiol (EE2). A multi-stage Delay Differential Equation fish population model was used to simulate the perch population during two periods when it showed contrasting population structures (1968–1973 and 1983–1988) as the result of a disease outbreak in 1976, and to extrapolate the effects of chemical exposure to EE2 and NP observed in the laboratory to the environment. In the absence of chemical exposure, model simulations predicted population numbers (females) in line with those derived from field survey data. Effects predictions were made for long-term exposure (20 years) to low and high doses of EE2 (1 and 10ngl−1) and NP (1 and 30μgl−1). The sustained high-level exposure of EE2 had a high probability of causing the extinction of a confined fish population such as that in Windermere, however, such an exposure scenario is unlikely. Far greater uncertainty surrounds the prediction of effects due to low-level exposure of fish populations and even though effects may appear to be significant in laboratory studies, such as fecundity lowered by 30%, they may not necessarily translate into significant population effects in the field. This is especially true if life-history data show high natural variability in terms of individual vital rates. Our work suggests that for a decline in the perch population numbers to be significant in Windermere, it would have to be substantially more than 50%. Our model predictions indicated that the post-disease population was generally more vulnerable than the pre-disease population and had a significantly greater probability of declining by 50% following single chemical exposure, but both populations were equally likely to decline following multiple chemical exposure. Rate of population recovery was shown to be a more sensitive measure in terms of differentiating the effects of low and high chemical exposure as well as the vulnerability of populations with contrasting structures, histories or levels of background stress. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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