17 results on '"Żmihorski, Michał"'
Search Results
2. Large fire initially reduces bird diversity in Poland's largest wetland biodiversity hotspot.
- Author
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Walesiak, Michał, Mikusiński, Grzegorz, Borowski, Zbigniew, and Żmihorski, Michał
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WETLAND biodiversity ,BIRD diversity ,BIODIVERSITY ,WILDLIFE conservation ,FRESHWATER biodiversity ,SPECIES diversity ,BIRD communities - Abstract
Freshwater wetlands are widely recognized as biodiversity hotspots for many organisms, including birds. Climate change and the projected increased risk of wetland fires may pose a major threat to wetland biodiversity in the future. There is urgent need to assess short- and long-term effect of fires on avian biodiversity and to establish relevant management implications. We analysed the short-term (first 3 months after fire) effect of a large (5 500 ha) spring wildfire on the community of breeding marshland birds in the best-preserved Polish local wetland biodiversity hotspot: Biebrza Valley. We compared the avian community structure and abundance of certain species before and after the fire on the 18 permanent transects located in both burned and unburned habitats. Within first breeding season post fire, fire significantly reduced pooled abundance and species richness of the whole bird community. Three bird species of special conservation concern (including aquatic warbler) temporarily disappeared from burned areas, and the numbers of 11 other species declined. In contrast, only 3 species benefited from the fire, none of which depended on marshes as their primary habitat. Although the reported strong initial fire effect is likely to fade away in subsequent years, its immediate detrimental effects on marshland birds should not be underestimated. We conclude that it is essential to temporarily provide the unburned adjacent refuge areas with additional protection and bird-friendly management and to focus on preventing further degradation of marshes to increase their resilience to fire. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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3. Ranging behaviour and habitat use in Montagu's Harrier Circus pygargus in extensive farmland of Eastern Poland.
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Krupiński, Dominik, Kotowska, Dorota, Recio, Mariano R., Żmihorski, Michał, Obłoza, Przemysław, and Mirski, Paweł
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BIRD populations ,SPATIAL ecology ,PREY availability ,AGRICULTURAL intensification ,CIRCUS ,BIRD declines - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Ornithology is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
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4. Are cities hotspots for bees? Local and regional diversity patterns lead to different conclusions.
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Banaszak-Cibicka, Weronika and Żmihorski, Michał
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SUBURBS ,CITIES & towns ,INSECT pollinators ,BEES ,SPECIES diversity ,RURAL population ,URBAN research - Abstract
With the decline of natural habitats, there is an ongoing debate about the importance of the urban environment for pollinating insects. Our research assessed patterns in wild bee species composition, as well as α-, β- and γ-diversity patterns and the nestedness structure in urban, suburban and rural areas. For three years bees were collected along 18 sampling transects in the Poznań area in western Poland. The average species diversity (α-diversity) and the average number of specimens per sample (local abundance) did not differ significantly between the three classes of urbanization. The rarefaction analysis, however, was partly contradictory to the results recorded on the local scale. The highest dissimilarity in the species composition among the samples was observed in the rural areas, while the lowest (more homogenous) was in the urban areas. The differences were significant. This resulted in the highest γ-diversity (cumulative number of species) in the rural areas and the lowest in the urban areas. Furthermore, the bee community in the habitats studied was significantly nested, indicating that species-poor sites (sites with high rank) constituted subsets of species-rich sites (sites with low rank) and that this pattern was not random. Samples collected in urban areas had a significantly higher nestedness rank compared to samples from the other two classes of urbanization, thus suggesting that the urban bee community is a subset of the rural bee community. This is an important conclusion, which emphasises that different components of species diversity need to be screened to identify the real biological impact of urbanisation on bee communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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5. Expansion and population dynamics of a non-native invasive species: the 40-year history of American mink colonisation of Poland.
- Author
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Brzeziński, Marcin, Zarzycka, Aleksandra, Żmihorski, Michał, and Zalewski, Andrzej
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The American mink, an invasive mammal introduced to Europe, severely impacts native biodiversity. The history of its invasion has been poorly investigated in central and eastern Europe, and the current variations in densities of mink populations are not well studied, thus making a reduction of its impact difficult. Here we analyse the temporal dynamics and spatial distribution of the American mink population in Poland, which began to establish itself at the beginning of the 1980s and originated from Polish farm escapees and immigrants from Lithuania and Belarus. Mink dispersal started in the north and continued to the south and in 2016 mink occurrence was recorded across ca. 75% of the country. By about 1997 mink had colonised half of Poland, and in 2016 the only mink-free area was in the south and south-east of the country. The rate of expansion showed accelerating and decelerating patterns, and reached its maximum 12 years after the beginning of the expansion. Mink farming in western Poland developed rapidly after 2000 and probably influenced acceleration of mink range expansion rates in years 2006-2008. Indices of mink densities showed significant nonlinear change over time since local populations were established and were highest in populations estimated to be 10-15 years old. The prediction of non-native species invasion rates and population dynamics should be incorporated into management actions curbing their negative impact on native fauna. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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6. Body size and wing asymmetry in bees along an urbanization gradient.
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Banaszak-Cibicka, Weronika, Fliszkiewicz, Monika, Langowska, Aleksandra, and Żmihorski, Michał
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The global loss of bee diversity and abundance is a central issue in conservation biology. There is increasing evidence that cities may play an important role in bee conservation, although urbanization may also have negative impacts. Here, we investigate individual body size variation and wing asymmetry (based on 11 traits) in the solitary bee Anthophora plumipes along a rural-urban gradient in Poland. The body size of captured individuals did not show any changes along the gradient. Directional asymmetry was present, since differences between sides in 10 out of 11 traits deviated significantly from zero, with the right-side wing traits being generally larger. In contrast to our expectations, the forewing was more asymmetric in rural than in suburban and urban areas. Similarly, the absolute asymmetry of 11 wing traits (i.e. pooling differences but ignoring direction) was also significantly greater in rural than in suburban and urban landscapes. Since asymmetry may be attributed to environmental pollution and food shortages, we conclude that the urban landscape provides bees with habitats of higher quality and thus should be considered as an important habitat for bee conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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7. Annual variation in prey composition of domestic cats in rural and urban environment.
- Author
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Krauze-Gryz, Dagny, Żmihorski, Michał, and Gryz, Jakub
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CATS ,VERTEBRATES ,PREDATION ,RODENTS ,URBAN ecology (Sociology) - Abstract
The threat that domestic cats pose to wildlife has gained increased recognition by researchers and conservationists, and in this study, we investigated the seasonal variability and the effects of environment type (rural vs. urban) on the prey composition of free-ranging house cats in Poland. We analysed the variability in 307 monthly prey samples of different prey items killed by cats and brought to their owners (i.e., prey brought home by cats living in one home in one month) between 2002 and 2007 at 26 rural and urban sites. The variability in prey composition over time was analysed using additive models and canonical correspondence analysis. In total, we recorded 1348 prey items. Rodents were the most common prey in both environments, but shrews and reptiles were killed by cats more often in the rural environment while birds (mainly sparrows and pigeons) were more common in the urban environment. Additionally, prey composition changed seasonally. The pooled number of vertebrates killed by cats was largest in September and lowest in January, and rodents were killed most often in September, shrews and birds in June, and reptiles in April. The seasonal variation in the prey composition of cats was relatively high in the rural environment and more stable in the urban environment. Prey composition seemed to follow temporal and spatial variations in prey availability, thus confirming a facultative feeding strategy in free-ranging house cats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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8. Empty in summer, crowded during migration? Structure of assemblage, distribution pattern and habitat use by bats (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae) in a narrow, marine peninsula.
- Author
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Ciechanowski, Mateusz, Jakusz-Gostomska, Anna, and Żmihorski, Michał
- Abstract
According to scarce available data, the use of coastal habitats by bats appears to be the most intensive during spring and autumn migrations, when coasts become migratory corridors. Migrating bats might seasonally enrich the fauna of sea islands and peninsulas, which often are poor in bats outside the migratory season. Hel Peninsula is part of the Polish Baltic Coast that extends the most into the sea; thus, it gives unique opportunity to assess that phenomenon quantitatively. To test for seasonal variation in structure of bat assemblage and bat activity, we recorded echolocation calls on walking transects. Seven species were recorded in total, with predominance of sedentary Eptesicus serotinus in June-July and migratory Pipistrellus nathusii in August-September. Occurrence of bats was the highest in deciduous and coniferous forests and the lowest in coasts and ports. Interaction of day of year and distance to mainland was highly significant, indicating that occurrence of bats was increasing from spring to autumn but this increase depended on location. Far from mainland, the mean occurrence of bats was rather stable over time. On transects located close to the mainland, bat occurrence was low at the beginning of the season but after mid-August increased rapidly. We confirmed that some topographically isolated parts of the sea coasts can host only very impoverished summer bat fauna. Bat activity in such sites increase in autumn; however, Hel Peninsula presumably does not act as a migratory corridor, but only as a target of local dispersal from mainland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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9. High efficiency protocol of DNA extraction from Micromys minutus mandibles from owl pellets: a tool for molecular research of cryptic mammal species.
- Author
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Buś, Magdalena, Żmihorski, Michał, Romanowski, Jerzy, Balčiauskienė, Laima, Cichocki, Jan, and Balčiauskas, Linas
- Abstract
Owl pellets have high potential as a source of DNA. However, this noninvasive method of collecting DNA is rarely used, and its methodological aspects are poorly understood. We investigated the methodology for DNA extraction and amplification from owl pellets containing the smallest European rodent-the Harvest mouse Micromys minutus-as an example. We used mandibles identified in owl pellets for mitochondrial and nuclear DNA amplification. For DNA extraction, we tested two commercial protocols and utilized a protocol being a combination of two commercial kits which ensured high efficiency of DNA extraction. Additionally, we recorded that the amount of DNA was five times higher in extracts from teeth as compared to DNA extracts from jawbones derived from the same mandible. The quantity of DNA was significantly positively correlated with biological sample weight; however, the age of the pellet remains had an impact on the level of inhibition. We recorded inhibition in 40 % of mtDNA extracts derived from pellets older than 150 months, whereas in DNA extracts from pellets younger than 80 months, we did not observe a negative impact of inhibition on PCR efficiency. The amplification success rate was 89.9 % for the mitochondrial fragment and 39.4 % in the case of the nuclear fragment. We observed partial degradation of DNA evidenced by the fact that the longest fragments that we were able to amplify in the case of mtDNA were 450 and 200 bp for nuDNA. The study shows that pellets can be considered as a source of DNA and have high potential for molecular research in the case of threatened species and species that are difficult to study using standard field techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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10. Never ending story: a lesson in using sampling efficiency methods with ground beetles.
- Author
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Żmihorski, Michał, Sienkiewicz, Paweł, and Tryjanowski, Piotr
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GROUND beetles ,INSECT sampling ,COMMUNITY organization ,LIFE sciences ,BIODIVERSITY ,CLASSIFICATION of insects - Abstract
Biological inventory is a crucial activity in life sciences field research. However, it is sometimes time-consuming and laborious to take representative samplings of communities, especially in the case of invertebrates. In this paper, we address the issue of sampling efficiency and its influence on obtained results. As a study system, we used data on epigeic carabid beetles (Carabidae) collected in 1999-2001 in the Warta River valley of western Poland. We trapped a total of 17,722 individuals belonging to 108 species. However, due to rarefaction methods, the expected number of species was estimated at 134-140, suggesting that from 26 to 32 species are missing from the material, even expressed as a huge number of collected specimens. The estimated probability that another captured individual will represent a new species (i.e. a species that was not already recorded) is 0.0010. In order to record all the species present in the study area, another 193,338 individuals need to be sampled (abundance-based approach) or another 1,871 samples need to be collected (incidence-based approach). This means that the collected material should be 10.9 times greater (or 7.9 times greater for incidence-based data) than what was actually collected in order to record all the species present in the study area. The results show that, in practice, full inventory is simply nearly impossible to achieve, and this knowledge should be included in inventory planning. Therefore, we argue that species accumulation curves and unseen species estimators need to be carefully examined and threshold probability of detecting a new species should be built into the design of inventory science. The ratio between recorded and estimated species richness and the estimated efficiency of further sampling can be easily computed with available freeware software and should be incorporated when performing biological inventories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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11. Environmental factors affecting the densities of owls in Polish farmland during 1980-2005.
- Author
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Żmihorski, Michał, Romanowski, Jerzy, and Chylarecki, Przemysław
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- 2012
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12. Wild bees along an urban gradient: winners and losers.
- Author
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Banaszak-Cibicka, Weronika and Żmihorski, Michał
- Subjects
BEES ,POLLINATORS ,BUMBLEBEES ,BOMBUS terrestris - Abstract
The variability of bee communities along an urban gradient has a potentially strong impact on pollinator-plant interactions. We investigated changes in bee species richness and community composition in the city centre and suburbs of Poznań, Poland. During 2006-2008 we recorded 2,495 individuals from 104 species. The most abundant species was Andrena haemmorhoa. Other abundant species were Bombus pascuorum, Andrena vaga, Andrena nitida, Bombus terrestris. Several species appeared to be more abundant in the city centre whereas others showed an opposite tendency. We have found that the urbanized landscape can act as a filter for the bee community since some specific ecological traits facilitate colonization of the city centre. Small-bodied species that start their activity later in the season and are not solitary preferred the city centre. However, bee species diversity and richness remained stable across the urban gradient indicating some advantages of being a city dwelling bee. We suggest that a city can be a very important habitat for a diverse bee fauna and that conservation of a wide range of habitats of different urbanization levels seems to be the most suitable strategy for conservation of bee diversity in cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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13. The effect of contrasting management types on two distinct taxonomic groups in a large-scaled windthrow.
- Author
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Żmihorski, Michał and Durska, Ewa
- Subjects
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SALVAGE logging , *WINDSTORMS , *FOREST management , *LOGGING , *BIRDS , *FLIES - Abstract
Improving ways of managing disturbed areas is in urgent need of further research. We assessed the effect of two contrasting management types-salvage logging and set aside for natural regeneration-applied to a large-scale windthrow in NE Poland on two distinct taxonomic groups of animals: scuttle flies and birds. In total, 5,368 individual scuttle flies were trapped and 1,649 individual birds were recorded. In both taxonomic groups, we recorded the 'winners and losers' of the effects of salvage logging. The responses of particular species in both groups were independent of their body size. Species diversity, assessed by rarefaction, increased as a result of the logging in birds and declined in scuttle flies. The species richness, corrected for unseen species of scuttle flies and birds, was higher on the managed windthrow when compared to the natural one. Comparison of the results obtained with published data from the intact stands of Białowieża Primeval Forest suggests that salvage logging reduced the similarity of the fly and bird community to those reported from undisturbed, natural forest areas. Our results concern mostly the common species. We conclude that salvage logging has considerable influence on assemblages of common species in the post-disturbance forests. Birds and flies did not respond similarly to salvage logging in term of species diversity, although both groups included species that were attracted to either managed or unmanaged windthrow sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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14. The effect of windthrow and its management on breeding bird communities in a managed forest.
- Author
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Żmihorski, Michał
- Subjects
WINDFALL (Forestry) ,BREEDING ,CLEARCUTTING ,SALVAGE logging ,SPECIES diversity ,TIMBER ,WINDSTORMS ,FORESTS & forestry ,ECOLOGICAL disturbances - Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate the impact of windthrow and two types of its management on the bird community of a managed, pine-dominated forest (NE Poland), where a windstorm event occurred in 2002. In 2007, the bird species composition was assessed using the point count method in three types of habitat: windthrow left undisturbed for natural regeneration, managed windthrow (all fallen trees removed), and intact forest (undisturbed by the windstorm, used as the control). In total, 2,365 individual birds of 70 species were recorded in the three analyzed habitats. The mean number of individuals per point and species per point was significantly higher in the natural windthrow than in the two other habitats. The diversity of the bird community was higher in the natural and managed windthrow, as compared to the control. The bird community of the control was significantly more similar to that of the natural windthrow than to the one in the managed windthrow. These results lead to a conclusion that the bird community was affected more by the clearing and artificial replanting following the windthrow than by the windthrow itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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15. Muskrat ( Ondatra zibethicus) decline after the expansion of American mink ( Neovison vison) in Poland.
- Author
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Brzeziński, Marcin, Romanowski, Jerzy, Żmihorski, Michał, and Karpowicz, Karolina
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MUSKRAT ,AMERICAN mink ,HABITATS ,POPULATION dynamics ,ANIMAL populations - Abstract
Field survey data in Central Poland revealed that the proportion of sites inhabited by muskrats decreased from 44% to 7% over one decade. This corresponded to the decline in hunting bags of muskrat over the whole of Poland. The largest hunting harvest of muskrat was recorded in 1987/1988 (66,416 individuals), the smallest in 2007/2008 (4,567 individuals). The decline in hunting bags occurred in all regions analysed; however, it was most rapid in the north and north-east. Before the expansion of mink, which started in northern Poland at the beginning of the 1980s, muskrat densities in particular regions depended on the availability of aquatic habitats. A comparison of hunting bags of muskrat and American mink in years 2002–2008 indicated a significant negative correlation between the numbers of these two species harvested in seven regions of Poland. The negative correlation between numbers of muskrat and mink suggests that mink predation is one of the most important factors in the decline of the muskrat population in Poland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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16. The effects of forest patch size and ownership structure on tree stand characteristics in a highly deforested landscape of central Poland.
- Author
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Żmihorski, Michał, Chylarecki, Przemysław, Rejt, Łukasz, and Mazgajski, Tomasz
- Abstract
Forest structure is influenced by the origin, history and manner of forest management. All these aspects may affect the occurrence of many forest dwelling organisms. We investigated the simultaneous impact of forest patch size and ownership structure on selected forest characteristics in central Poland. We sampled stand composition, the DBH of particular tree species, basal area, species number and species diversity in all 32 forest patches found in a farmland-dominated area of 150 km
2 . Forest ownership status was linked to patch size: large patches were state-owned and small ones were private. Ownership status also affected the average DBH and basal area of all tree species pooled, with lower DBH and basal area found in private forests. The share of deciduous trees was negatively affected by forest size, while pine was positively affected, which could suggest that forest management and economic interests may be related to this factor. The share of non-native species was higher in state forests. Our results showed that forest patch size could be associated with its ownership status, which is commonly ignored in research on the relationship between forest size and species occurrence. Historical as well as sociological aspects related to private forests in Poland are also presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
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17. Seasonal and habitat variation in the diet of the tawny owl ( Strix aluco) in central Poland during unusually warm years.
- Author
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Romanowski, Jerzy and Żmihorski, Michał
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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