9 results on '"Carrascal, Luis M."'
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2. Effects of wing area reduction on winter body mass and foraging behaviour in coal tits: field and aviary experiments
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Carrascal, Luis M. and Polo, Vicente
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Birds ,Coal industry ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
To link to full-text access for this article, visit this link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2005.11.027 Byline: Luis M. Carrascal, Vicente Polo Abstract: Theoretical and experimental evidence suggests that an increase in flight costs will decrease flight performance, and that birds should trade-off the benefits of body reserves to minimize these costs. Alternatively, birds could avoid starvation by increasing food intake, thereby maintaining body reserves, and/or decreasing flight activity to compensate for the greater per unit flight costs. To test the effect of increased flight costs on body mass regulation and on flying and feeding activity, we experimentally manipulated wing area in a free-ranging wintering population of coal tits, Periparus ater, and in captive birds living in a less restrictive environment (large outdoor aviaries). In the field, body mass decreased when wing area was reduced, but heavier birds lost more weight than lighter birds as a consequence of an allometric increase in flying costs. However, wing area reduction had no effect on body mass in the aviaries. Birds also flew less when wing area was reduced and those with higher wing loadings decreased flying frequency more markedly. We suggest that the goal of small resident birds living in a Mediterranean montane climate would be to maintain daily fat reserves within narrow limits during autumn and winter, even under contrasting ecological conditions. Author Affiliation: Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, Spain Article History: Received 26 October 2004; Revised 14 February 2005; Accepted 25 November 2005 Article Note: (miscellaneous) MS. number: 8316R
- Published
- 2006
3. Urban influence on birds at a regional scale: A case study with the avifauna of northern Madrid province
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Palomino, David and Carrascal, Luis M.
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- 2006
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4. Coal tits, Parus ater, lose weight in response to chases by predators
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Carrascal, Luis M. and Polo, Vicente
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Predation (Biology) -- Research ,Titmice -- Behavior ,Animal behavior -- Research ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
It is predicted that birds decrease their body weight in response to increased predation because lighter birds are able to take flight faster and are more maneuverable. A new study investigates the effects of predation on coal tits. Results suggest that coal tits, and other small birds, lose weight in response to chases by predators.
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- 1999
5. What species-specific traits make a bird a better surrogate of native species richness? A test with insular avifauna
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Carrascal, Luis M., Cayuela, Luis, Palomino, David, and Seoane, Javier
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SPECIES diversity , *BIRD conservation , *BIODIVERSITY conservation , *DATA analysis , *HABITATS , *REGRESSION analysis , *STATISTICAL correlation , *AGRICULTURE & the environment - Abstract
Abstract: Identification of species-specific traits that make a species a better surrogate of biodiversity is a need in order to implement successful conservation programmes in the face of limited data and resources. This study analyzes the relationship between the abundance of different surrogate species and species richness for terrestrial native avifauna of autochthonous steppe and semiarid environments in Fuerteventura Island (Spain) at different spatial grains, and explores which species-specific ecological traits (body mass, ecological density, habitat breadth, coverage of urban and agricultural environments) and conservation features (endemicity, conservation status) make a species more efficient as a surrogate. Results indicate that abundance of those surrogate species which are typically targeted by local conservation managers (according to their rarity and increase public awareness) proves to be a poor predictor of three different measures of species richness of the native terrestrial avifauna of Fuerteventura at all spatial resolutions. Nonetheless, some species were found to perform better than others according to partial least squares regression analyses applied to relate species-specific ecological traits and conservation features with correlation coefficients between abundance of each bird species and total bird richness. The best surrogates for global bird species richness are those smaller birds of medium–high abundances, broad habitat preferences, less threatened status, and with a high degree of endemicity. No scale-dependency was observed in the surrogacy power of species. Conservation planners in island scenarios should use a selection of bird species with these characteristics to identify conservation target areas in order to maximize the efficiency of surrogacy approaches. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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6. Differential effects of vegetation restoration in Mediterranean abandoned cropland by secondary succession and pine plantations on bird assemblages.
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Rey-Benayas, José M., Galván, Ismael, and Carrascal, Luis M.
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FOREST conservation ,VEGETATION & climate ,FOREST restoration ,ECOLOGICAL succession ,ALEPPO pine ,TREE farms ,SPECIES diversity ,BIRD surveys - Abstract
Abstract: Two contrasting trajectories for vegetation restoration in agricultural landscapes are secondary succession following cropland abandonment that can regenerate woodlands (passive restoration) and conversion of cropland to tree plantations (active restoration), which have mostly focused on pine species in the Mediterranean Basin. We compared the effects of these two contrasting trajectories of vegetation restoration on bird assemblages in central Spain. Vegetation structure differed in the two restoration trajectories, pine plantations attaining higher tree cover and height (31% and 4.1m, respectively) but lower strata complexity than secondary shrubland and holm oak woodland (which attained 10% and 1.4m of tree cover and height, respectively). Bird species richness differed in stands under active or passive restoration trajectories, the former collecting a higher total number of species (4.2 species per 0.78ha plot) than the latter (3.5 species per plot). The number of forest species increased with vegetation maturity in both restoration trajectories, but especially in stands under active restoration. The occurrence of woodland generalist species increased and of species inhabiting open habitats decreased in actively restored stands, being some of these latter species of high conservation priority in the European context but relatively common at the regional level. Bird species inhabiting pine plantations had broader habitat breadth at the regional level than those inhabiting secondary shrublands and woodlands. Maximum regional density did not differ between both restoration trajectories, but it increased with development of the herbaceous layer only at the secondary succession trajectory. The relative importance of species of European biogeographic origin was higher in mature pine plantations (58.9% of total bird abundance) than in mature holm oak woodlands (34.4%), whereas that of Mediterranean species was considerably higher in the latter (40.1%) than in the former (20%). Bird assemblages of relatively small patches of pine plantations are unable to reflect the regional avifauna, in contrast with the relationships between local and regional assemblage characteristics that can be found in isolated natural forests. We conclude that programs of vegetation restoration should base upon a range of approaches that include passive restoration, active restoration with a variety of tree and shrub species, and mixed models to conciliate agricultural production, vegetation restoration and conservation of target species. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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7. Linking density, productivity and trends of an endangered species: The Bonelli's eagle in Spain
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Carrascal, Luis M. and Seoane, Javier
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ANIMAL population density , *BIRD reproduction , *ENDANGERED species , *BONELLI'S eagle , *BIRD breeding , *ENVIRONMENTAL quality - Abstract
Abstract: Whether regional population density is a good indicator of environmental quality according to demographic variables such as breeding success or short-term population trends is controversial. In this paper we analyze the interrelationships among regional population density, breeding success and recent population trends of an endangered species, Bonelli''s eagle in the Iberian Peninsula. We also analyze the different influence of geographical, climatic, landscape structure and human impact variables on regional variation in those demographic variables. Breeding success was higher and population decrease was lower in those areas where the population density of Bonelli''s eagle was greater. Breeding success, density and recent population trends of Bonelli''s eagle were tightly related, increasing from northern to southern Iberian Peninsula (with highest figures at intermediate latitudes), and as sun radiation increased, and altitude decreased. Breeding success and population density were significantly lower in the periphery of the distribution range than in core areas in the Iberian Peninsula. Population trends between 2000 and 2005 were also more negative (decreasing) in the periphery. Overall, these results suggest that population density in this endangered species of large home-range is a good indicator of environmental quality and reproductive output, and that peripheral populations occupy low-suitability areas with lower breeding success, where negative short-term population trends are more likely. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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8. Species-specific traits associated to prediction errors in bird habitat suitability modelling
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Seoane, Javier, Carrascal, Luis M., Alonso, César Luis, and Palomino, David
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HABITAT selection , *ANIMAL ecology , *BODY size , *ANIMAL morphology - Abstract
Abstract: Although there is a wide range of empirical models applied to predict the distribution and abundance of organisms, we lack an understanding of which ecological characteristics of the species being predicted affect the accuracy of those models. However, if we knew the effect of specific traits on modelling results, we could both improve the sampling design for particular species and properly judge model performance. In this study, we first model spatial variation in winter bird density in a large region (Central Spain) applying regression trees to 64 species. Then we associate model accuracy to characteristics of species describing their habitat selection, environmental specialization, maximum densities in the study region, gregariousness, detectability and body size. Predictive power of models covaried with model characteristics (i.e., sample size) and autoecological traits of species, with 48% of interspecific variability being explained by two partial least regression components. There are species-specific characteristics constraining abundance forecasting that are rooted in the natural history of organisms. Controlling for the positive effect of prevalence, the better predicted species had high environmental specialization and reached higher maximum densities. We also detected a measurable positive effect of species detectability. Thus, generalist species and those locally scarce and inconspicuous are unlikely to be modelled with great accuracy. Our results suggest that the limitations caused by those species-specific traits associated with survey work (e.g., conspicuousness, gregariousness or maximum ecological densities) will be difficult to circumvent by either statistical approaches or increasing sampling effort while recording biodiversity in extensive programs. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2005
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9. A protocol for analysing thermal stress in insects using infrared thermography.
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Gallego, Belén, Verdú, José R., Carrascal, Luis M., and Lobo, Jorge M.
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THERMAL stresses , *LEAST squares , *HEMOLYMPH , *INSECTS , *ENTOMOLOGY - Abstract
The study of insect responses to thermal stress has involved a variety of protocols and methodologies that hamper the ability to compare results between studies. For that reason, the development of a protocol to standardize thermal assays is necessary. In this sense, infrared thermography solves some of the problems allowing us to take continuous temperature measurements without handling the individuals, an important fact in cold-blooded organisms like insects. Here, we present a working protocol based on infrared thermography to estimate both cold and heat thermal stress in insects. We analyse both the change in the body temperature of individuals and their behavioural response. In addition, we used partial least squares regression for the statistical analysis of our data, a technique that solves the problem of having a large number of variables and few individuals, allowing us to work with rare or endemic species. To test our protocol, we chose two species of congeneric, narrowly distributed dung beetles that are endemic to the southeastern part of the Iberian Peninsula. With our protocol we have obtained five variables in the response to cold and twelve in the response to heat. With this methodology we discriminate between the two flightless species of Jekelius through their thermal response. In response to cold, Jekelius hernandezi showed a higher rate of cooling and reached higher temperatures of stupor and haemolymph freezing than Jekelius punctatolineatus . Both species displayed similar thermoregulation ranges before reaching lethal body temperature with heat stress. Overall, we have demonstrated that infrared thermography is a suitable method to assess insect thermal responses with a high degree of sensitivity, allowing for the discrimination between closely related species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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