406 results on '"Young, Hillary"'
Search Results
2. Food webs for three burn severities after wildfire in the Eldorado National Forest, California.
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McLaughlin, John P, Schroeder, John W, White, Angela M, Culhane, Kate, Mirts, Haley E, Tarbill, Gina L, Sire, Laura, Page, Matt, Baker, Elijah J, Moritz, Max, Brashares, Justin, Young, Hillary S, and Sollmann, Rahel
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Life Below Water - Abstract
Wildfire dynamics are changing around the world and understanding their effects on ecological communities and landscapes is urgent and important. We report detailed food webs for unburned, low-to-moderate and high severity burned habitats three years post-fire in the Eldorado National Forest, California. The cumulative cross-habitat food web contains 3,084 ontogenetic stages (nodes) or plant parts comprising 849 species (including 107 primary producers, 634 invertebrates, 94 vertebrates). There were 178,655 trophic interactions between these nodes. We provide information on taxonomy, body size, biomass density and trophic interactions under each of the three burn conditions. We detail 19 sampling methods deployed across 27 sites (nine in each burn condition) used to estimate the richness, body size, abundance and biomass density estimates in the node lists. We provide the R code and raw data to estimate summarized node densities and assign trophic links.
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- 2022
3. Small mammal responses to fire severity mediated by vegetation characteristics and species traits
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Culhane, Kathryn, Sollmann, Rahel, White, Angela M, Tarbill, Gina L, Cooper, Scott D, and Young, Hillary S
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Environmental Sciences ,Ecological Applications ,Ecology ,Biological Sciences ,Health Disparities ,Minority Health ,community structure ,fire severity ,functional trait ,resource use ,small mammal ,Evolutionary Biology ,Evolutionary biology ,Ecological applications - Abstract
The frequency of large, high-severity "mega-fires" has increased in recent decades, with numerous consequences for forest ecosystems. In particular, small mammal communities are vulnerable to post-fire shifts in resource availability and play critical roles in forest ecosystems. Inconsistencies in previous observations of small mammal community responses to fire severity underscore the importance of examining mechanisms regulating the effects of fire severity on post-fire recovery of small mammal communities. We compared small mammal abundance, diversity, and community structure among habitats that burned at different severities, and used vegetation characteristics and small mammal functional traits to predict community responses to fire severity three years after one mega-fire in the Sierra Nevada, California. Using a model-based fourth-corner analysis, we examined how interactions between vegetation variables and small mammal traits associated with their resource use were associated with post-fire small mammal community structure among fire severity categories. Small mammal abundance was similar across fire severity categories, but diversity decreased and community structure shifted as fire severity increased. Differences in small mammal communities were large only between unburned and high-severity sites. Three highly correlated fire-dependent vegetation variables affected by fire and the volume of soft coarse woody debris were associated with small mammal community structures. Furthermore, we found that interactions between vegetation variables and three small mammal traits (feeding guild, primary foraging mode, and primary nesting habit) predicted community structure across fire severity categories. We concluded that resource use was important in regulating small mammal recovery after the fire because vegetation provided required resources to small mammals as determined by their functional traits. Given the mechanistic nature of our analyses, these results may be applicable to other fire-prone forest systems, although it will be important to conduct studies across large biogeographic regions and over long post-fire time periods to assess generality.
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- 2022
4. The influence of vector‐borne disease on human history: socio‐ecological mechanisms
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Athni, Tejas S, Shocket, Marta S, Couper, Lisa I, Nova, Nicole, Caldwell, Iain R, Caldwell, Jamie M, Childress, Jasmine N, Childs, Marissa L, De Leo, Giulio A, Kirk, Devin G, MacDonald, Andrew J, Olivarius, Kathryn, Pickel, David G, Roberts, Steven O, Winokur, Olivia C, Young, Hillary S, Cheng, Julian, Grant, Elizabeth A, Kurzner, Patrick M, Kyaw, Saw, Lin, Bradford J, Lopez, Ricardo C, Massihpour, Diba S, Olsen, Erica C, Roache, Maggie, Ruiz, Angie, Schultz, Emily A, Shafat, Muskan, Spencer, Rebecca L, Bharti, Nita, and Mordecai, Erin A
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Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation ,Biological Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Rare Diseases ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Disease Vectors ,Humans ,Malaria ,Vector Borne Diseases ,Arthropod ,colonialism ,disease ecology ,environment ,malaria ,mosquito ,plague ,trypanosomiasis ,vector-borne disease ,yellow fever ,Ecological Applications ,Ecology ,Evolutionary Biology ,Ecological applications ,Environmental management - Abstract
Vector-borne diseases (VBDs) are embedded within complex socio-ecological systems. While research has traditionally focused on the direct effects of VBDs on human morbidity and mortality, it is increasingly clear that their impacts are much more pervasive. VBDs are dynamically linked to feedbacks between environmental conditions, vector ecology, disease burden, and societal responses that drive transmission. As a result, VBDs have had profound influence on human history. Mechanisms include: (1) killing or debilitating large numbers of people, with demographic and population-level impacts; (2) differentially affecting populations based on prior history of disease exposure, immunity, and resistance; (3) being weaponised to promote or justify hierarchies of power, colonialism, racism, classism and sexism; (4) catalysing changes in ideas, institutions, infrastructure, technologies and social practices in efforts to control disease outbreaks; and (5) changing human relationships with the land and environment. We use historical and archaeological evidence interpreted through an ecological lens to illustrate how VBDs have shaped society and culture, focusing on case studies from four pertinent VBDs: plague, malaria, yellow fever and trypanosomiasis. By comparing across diseases, time periods and geographies, we highlight the enormous scope and variety of mechanisms by which VBDs have influenced human history.
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- 2021
5. The effects of herbivore aggregations at water sources on savanna plants differ across soil and climate gradients
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Titcomb, Georgia C., Amooni, Godfrey, Mantas, John Naisikie, and Young, Hillary S.
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- 2021
6. A Renaissance of Atoll Ecology.
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Steibl, Sebastian, Bunbury, Nancy, Young, Hillary S., and Russell, James C.
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The approximately 320 atolls of the world, scattered across the tropical oceanic basins, constitute a unique type of ecosystem in that they are each an integrated unit consisting of island, coral reef, and lagoon components. Atolls have a complex geology, ecology, and biogeography, which can be fully appreciated only by transcending the classic boundary thinking of marine and terrestrial realms. The atolls we observe today were shaped by Quaternary sea-level fluctuations, which imposed strong environmental filters on their communities. As entirely biogenic, reef-borne structures, the islands of atolls depend upon marine productivity, which catalyzes island community assembly. Island species communities exist in complex dynamic equilibria with the surrounding oceanographic conditions. Energy fluxes and element cycles of the atoll system readily cross habitat boundaries and create a productive, diverse, and biomass-rich ecosystem on land and underwater. Past human disturbances and future global change put atolls at the forefront of conservation and ecological restoration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Invasive rat eradication strongly impacts plant recruitment on a tropical atoll.
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Wolf, Coral, Young, Hillary, Zilliacus, Kelly, Wegmann, Alexander, McKown, Matthew, Holmes, Nick, Tershy, Bernie, Dirzo, Rodolfo, Kropidlowski, Stefan, and Croll, Donald
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Animals ,Biodiversity ,Cocos ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,Ecology ,Ecosystem ,Hawaii ,Introduced Species ,Islands ,Pacific Ocean ,Rats ,Seedlings ,Trees ,Tropical Climate - Abstract
Rat eradication has become a common conservation intervention in island ecosystems and its effectiveness in protecting native vertebrates is increasingly well documented. Yet, the impacts of rat eradication on plant communities remain poorly understood. Here we compare native and non-native tree and palm seedling abundance before and after eradication of invasive rats (Rattus rattus) from Palmyra Atoll, Line Islands, Central Pacific Ocean. Overall, seedling recruitment increased for five of the six native trees species examined. While pre-eradication monitoring found no seedlings of Pisonia grandis, a dominant tree species that is important throughout the Pacific region, post-eradication monitoring documented a notable recruitment event immediately following eradication, with up to 688 individual P. grandis seedlings per 100m2 recorded one month post-eradication. Two other locally rare native trees with no observed recruitment in pre-eradication surveys had recruitment post-rat eradication. However, we also found, by five years post-eradication, a 13-fold increase in recruitment of the naturalized and range-expanding coconut palm Cocos nucifera. Our results emphasize the strong effects that a rat eradication can have on tree recruitment with expected long-term effects on canopy composition. Rat eradication released non-native C. nucifera, likely with long-term implications for community composition, potentially necessitating future management interventions. Eradication, nevertheless, greatly benefitted recruitment of native tree species. If this pattern persists over time, we expect long-term benefits for flora and fauna dependent on these native species.
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- 2018
8. Shortened food chain length in a fished versus unfished coral reef
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Young, Hillary S., primary, McCauley, Finn O., additional, Micheli, Fiorenza, additional, Dunbar, Robert B., additional, and McCauley, Douglas J., additional
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- 2024
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9. Shifting mammal communities and declining species richness along an elevational gradient on Mount Kenya
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Snider, Matthew H., primary, Helgen, Kristofer M., additional, Young, Hillary S., additional, Agwanda, Bernard, additional, Schuttler, Stephanie, additional, Titcomb, Georgia C., additional, Branch, Douglas, additional, Dommain, René, additional, and Kays, Roland, additional
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- 2024
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10. Human infectious disease burdens decrease with urbanization but not with biodiversity
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Wood, Chelsea L, McInturff, Alex, Young, Hillary S, Kim, DoHyung, and Lafferty, Kevin D
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Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Biodiversity ,Communicable Diseases ,Disabled Persons ,Environment ,Humans ,Prevalence ,Public Health ,Quality-Adjusted Life Years ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Urbanization ,Infectious disease ,disability-adjusted life year ,dilution effect ,global change ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Evolutionary Biology - Abstract
Infectious disease burdens vary from country to country and year to year due to ecological and economic drivers. Recently, Murray et al. (Murray CJ et al 2012 Lancet380, 2197-2223. (doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(12)61689-4)) estimated country-level morbidity and mortality associated with a variety of factors, including infectious diseases, for the years 1990 and 2010. Unlike other databases that report disease prevalence or count outbreaks per country, Murray et al. report health impacts in per-person disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), allowing comparison across diseases with lethal and sublethal health effects. We investigated the spatial and temporal relationships between DALYs lost to infectious disease and potential demographic, economic, environmental and biotic drivers, for the 60 intermediate-sized countries where data were available and comparable. Most drivers had unique associations with each disease. For example, temperature was positively associated with some diseases and negatively associated with others, perhaps due to differences in disease agent thermal optima, transmission modes and host species identities. Biodiverse countries tended to have high disease burdens, consistent with the expectation that high diversity of potential hosts should support high disease transmission. Contrary to the dilution effect hypothesis, increases in biodiversity over time were not correlated with improvements in human health, and increases in forestation over time were actually associated with increased disease burden. Urbanization and wealth were associated with lower burdens for many diseases, a pattern that could arise from increased access to sanitation and healthcare in cities and increased investment in healthcare. The importance of urbanization and wealth helps to explain why most infectious diseases have become less burdensome over the past three decades, and points to possible levers for further progress in improving global public health.This article is part of the themed issue 'Conservation, biodiversity and infectious disease: scientific evidence and policy implications'.
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- 2017
11. Interacting effects of land use and climate on rodent-borne pathogens in central Kenya
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Young, Hillary S, McCauley, Douglas J, Dirzo, Rodolfo, Nunn, Charles L, Campana, Michael G, Agwanda, Bernard, Otarola-Castillo, Erik R, Castillo, Eric R, Pringle, Robert M, Veblen, Kari E, Salkeld, Daniel J, Stewardson, Kristin, Fleischer, Robert, Lambin, Eric F, Palmer, Todd M, and Helgen, Kristofer M
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Biological Sciences ,Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Infection ,Life on Land ,Good Health and Well Being ,Agriculture ,Animals ,Climate Change ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,Disease Vectors ,Kenya ,Prevalence ,Public Health ,Rodentia ,Zoonoses ,disease ,diversity ,dilution effect ,susceptible host regulation ,landscape ecology ,land-use change ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Evolutionary Biology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
Understanding the effects of anthropogenic disturbance on zoonotic disease risk is both a critical conservation objective and a public health priority. Here, we evaluate the effects of multiple forms of anthropogenic disturbance across a precipitation gradient on the abundance of pathogen-infected small mammal hosts in a multi-host, multi-pathogen system in central Kenya. Our results suggest that conversion to cropland and wildlife loss alone drive systematic increases in rodent-borne pathogen prevalence, but that pastoral conversion has no such systematic effects. The effects are most likely explained both by changes in total small mammal abundance, and by changes in relative abundance of a few high-competence species, although changes in vector assemblages may also be involved. Several pathogens responded to interactions between disturbance type and climatic conditions, suggesting the potential for synergistic effects of anthropogenic disturbance and climate change on the distribution of disease risk. Overall, these results indicate that conservation can be an effective tool for reducing abundance of rodent-borne pathogens in some contexts (e.g. wildlife loss alone); however, given the strong variation in effects across disturbance types, pathogen taxa and environmental conditions, the use of conservation as public health interventions will need to be carefully tailored to specific pathogens and human contexts.This article is part of the themed issue 'Conservation, biodiversity and infectious disease: scientific evidence and policy implications'.
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- 2017
12. A mammoth undertaking: harnessing insight from functional ecology to shape de‐extinction priority setting
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McCauley, Douglas J, Hardesty‐Moore, Molly, Halpern, Benjamin S, and Young, Hillary S
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Life on Land ,cascading effect ,conservation ,de-extinction ,diversity ,extinction ,functional ecology ,functional redundancy ,mammoth ,passenger pigeon ,restoration ,Environmental Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Ecology - Published
- 2017
13. Limited trophic partitioning among sympatric delphinids off a tropical oceanic atoll.
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Young, Hillary, Nigro, Katherine, McCauley, Douglas J, Ballance, Lisa T, Oleson, Erin M, and Baumann-Pickering, Simone
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Skin ,Animals ,Dolphins ,Biopsy ,Behavior ,Animal ,Feeding Behavior ,Ecosystem ,Food Chain ,Nutritional Status ,Remote Sensing Technology ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Understanding trophic relationships among marine predators in remote environments is challenging, but it is critical to understand community structure and dynamics. In this study, we used stable isotope analysis of skin biopsies to compare the isotopic, and thus, trophic niches of three sympatric delphinids in the waters surrounding Palmyra Atoll, in the Central Tropical Pacific: the melon-headed whale (Peponocephala electra), Gray's spinner dolphin (Stenella longirostris longirostris), and the common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus). δ15N values suggested that T. truncatus occupied a significantly higher trophic position than the other two species. δ13C values did not significantly differ between the three delphinds, potentially indicating no spatial partitioning in depth or distance from shore in foraging among species. The dietary niche area-determined by isotopic variance among individuals-of T. truncatus was also over 30% smaller than those of the other species taken at the same place, indicating higher population specialization or lower interindividual variation. For P. electra only, there was some support for intraspecific variation in foraging ecology across years, highlighting the need for temporal information in studying dietary niche. Cumulatively, isotopic evidence revealed surprisingly little evidence for trophic niche partitioning in the delphinid community of Palmyra Atoll compared to other studies. However, resource partitioning may happen via other behavioral mechanisms, or prey abundance or availability may be adequate to allow these three species to coexist without any such partitioning. It is also possible that isotopic signatures are inadequate to detect trophic partitioning in this environment, possibly because isotopes of prey are highly variable or insufficiently resolved to allow for differentiation.
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- 2017
14. Genome sequence, population history, and pelage genetics of the endangered African wild dog (Lycaon pictus).
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Campana, Michael G, Parker, Lillian D, Hawkins, Melissa TR, Young, Hillary S, Helgen, Kristofer M, Szykman Gunther, Micaela, Woodroffe, Rosie, Maldonado, Jesús E, and Fleischer, Robert C
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Chromosomes ,Animals ,Animals ,Wild ,Canidae ,Genetics ,Population ,Genomics ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Genome ,Geography ,Genome ,Mitochondrial ,Selection ,Genetic ,Endangered Species ,Lycaon pictus ,Pelage ,Population history ,Selection ,Wild ,Genetics ,Population ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Mitochondrial ,Genetic ,Human Genome ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Bioinformatics - Abstract
BackgroundThe African wild dog (Lycaon pictus) is an endangered African canid threatened by severe habitat fragmentation, human-wildlife conflict, and infectious disease. A highly specialized carnivore, it is distinguished by its social structure, dental morphology, absence of dewclaws, and colorful pelage.ResultsWe sequenced the genomes of two individuals from populations representing two distinct ecological histories (Laikipia County, Kenya and KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa). We reconstructed population demographic histories for the two individuals and scanned the genomes for evidence of selection.ConclusionsWe show that the African wild dog has undergone at least two effective population size reductions in the last 1,000,000 years. We found evidence of Lycaon individual-specific regions of low diversity, suggestive of inbreeding or population-specific selection. Further research is needed to clarify whether these population reductions and low diversity regions are characteristic of the species as a whole. We documented positive selection on the Lycaon mitochondrial genome. Finally, we identified several candidate genes (ASIP, MITF, MLPH, PMEL) that may play a role in the characteristic Lycaon pelage.
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- 2016
15. Use of high-resolution acoustic cameras to study reef shark behavioral ecology
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McCauley, Douglas J, DeSalles, Paul A, Young, Hillary S, Gardner, Jonathan PA, and Micheli, Fiorenza
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Life Below Water ,Behavior ,Movement ecology ,Mobile species ,Sharks ,Acoustic camera ,Sonar ,Environmental Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Marine Biology & Hydrobiology - Published
- 2016
16. Large wildlife removal drives immune defence increases in rodents
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Young, Hillary S, Dirzo, Rodolfo, Helgen, Kristofer M, McCauley, Douglas J, Nunn, Charles L, Snyder, Paul, Veblen, Kari E, Zhao, Serena, and Ezenwa, Vanessa O
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Ecological Applications ,Biological Sciences ,Ecology ,Environmental Management ,Environmental Sciences ,Life on Land ,Good Health and Well Being ,defaunation ,ecoimmunology ,Kenya Long-term Exclosure Experiment ,rodent ,wildlife decline ,Biological sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
Anthropogenic disturbances involving land use change, climate disruption, pollution and invasive species have been shown to impact immune function of wild animals. These immune changes have direct impacts on the fitness of impacted animals and, also, potentially indirect effects on other species and on ecological processes, notably involving the spread of infectious disease. Here, we investigate whether the selective loss of large wildlife can also drive changes in immune function of other consumer species. Using a long-standing large-scale exclosure experiment in East Africa, we investigated the effects of selective removal of large wildlife on multiple measures of immune function in the dominant small rodent in the system, the East African pouched mouse, Saccostomus mearnsi. We find support for a general increase in immune function in landscapes where large wildlife has been removed, but with some variation across immune parameters. These changes may be mediated in part by increased pathogen pressure in plots where large wildlife has been removed due to major increases in rodent density in such plots, but other factors such as changes in food resources are also likely involved. Overall, our research reveals that the elimination of large-bodied wildlife - now recognized as another major form of global anthropogenic change - may have cascading effects on immune health, with the potential for these effects to also impact disease dynamics in ecological communities. Lay Summary Functional Ecology
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- 2016
17. Microbial Ecology of the Western Gull ( Larus occidentalis )
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Cockerham, Susan, Lee, Becky, Orben, Rachael A., Suryan, Robert M., Torres, Leigh G., Warzybok, Pete, Bradley, Russell, Jahncke, Jaime, Young, Hillary S., Ouverney, Cleber, and Shaffer, Scott A.
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- 2019
18. Effects of land-use change on community diversity and composition are highly variable among functional groups
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Graham, Stuart I., Kinnaird, Margaret F., O’Brien, Timothy G., Vågen, Tor-G, Winowiecki, Leigh A., Young, Truman P., and Young, Hillary S.
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- 2019
19. Drivers of Intensity and Prevalence of Flea Parasitism on Small Mammals in East African Savanna Ecosystems.
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Young, Hillary S, Dirzo, Rodolfo, McCauley, Douglas J, Agwanda, Bernard, Cattaneo, Lia, Dittmar, Katharina, Eckerlin, Ralph P, Fleischer, Robert C, Helgen, Lauren E, Hintz, Ashley, Montinieri, John, Zhao, Serena, and Helgen, Kristofer M
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Animals ,Rodentia ,Plants ,Rodent Diseases ,Soil ,Body Size ,Prevalence ,Ecosystem ,Rain ,Seasons ,Kenya ,Female ,Male ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Siphonaptera ,Flea Infestations ,Grassland ,Mycology & Parasitology ,Biological Sciences ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences - Abstract
The relative importance of environmental factors and host factors in explaining variation in prevalence and intensity of flea parasitism in small mammal communities is poorly established. We examined these relationships in an East African savanna landscape, considering multiple host levels: across individuals within a local population, across populations within species, and across species within a landscape. We sampled fleas from 2,672 small mammals of 27 species. This included a total of 8,283 fleas, with 5 genera and 12 species identified. Across individual hosts within a site, both rodent body mass and season affected total intensity of flea infestation, although the explanatory power of these factors was generally modest (
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- 2015
20. Effects of Land Use on Plague (Yersinia pestis) Activity in Rodents in Tanzania
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McCauley, Douglas J, Salkeld, Daniel J, Young, Hillary S, Makundi, Rhodes, Dirzo, Rodolfo, Eckerlin, Ralph P, Lambin, Eric F, Gaffikin, Lynne, Barry, Michele, and Helgen, Kristofer M
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Biodefense ,Prevention ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Vaccine Related ,Aetiology ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Life on Land ,Agriculture ,Animals ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,DNA Barcoding ,Taxonomic ,Disease Reservoirs ,Ecosystem ,Female ,Geography ,Humans ,Plague ,Prevalence ,Rodent Diseases ,Rodentia ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Siphonaptera ,Tanzania ,Yersinia pestis ,Zoonoses ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Tropical Medicine - Abstract
Understanding the effects of land-use change on zoonotic disease risk is a pressing global health concern. Here, we compare prevalence of Yersinia pestis, the etiologic agent of plague, in rodents across two land-use types-agricultural and conserved-in northern Tanzania. Estimated abundance of seropositive rodents nearly doubled in agricultural sites compared with conserved sites. This relationship between land-use type and abundance of seropositive rodents is likely mediated by changes in rodent and flea community composition, particularly via an increase in the abundance of the commensal species, Mastomys natalensis, in agricultural habitats. There was mixed support for rodent species diversity negatively impacting Y. pestis seroprevalence. Together, these results suggest that land-use change could affect the risk of local transmission of plague, and raise critical questions about transmission dynamics at the interface of conserved and agricultural habitats. These findings emphasize the importance of understanding disease ecology in the context of rapidly proceeding landscape change.
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- 2015
21. Context‐dependent effects of large‐wildlife declines on small‐mammal communities in central Kenya
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Young, Hillary S, McCauley, Douglas J, Dirzo, Rodolfo, Goheen, Jacob R, Agwanda, Bernard, Brook, Cara, Otárola-Castillo, Erik, Ferguson, Adam W, Kinyua, Stephen N, McDonough, Molly M, Palmer, Todd M, Pringle, Robert M, Young, Truman P, and Helgen, Kristofer M
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Ecological Applications ,Biological Sciences ,Ecology ,Environmental Management ,Environmental Sciences ,Life on Land ,Animals ,Animals ,Wild ,Biodiversity ,Body Size ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,Kenya ,Population Dynamics ,community structure ,defaunation ,diversity ,East Africa ,environmental gradients ,exclosure experiment ,land-use change ,species richness ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Agricultural ,veterinary and food sciences ,Biological sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
Many species of large wildlife have declined drastically worldwide. These reductions often lead to profound shifts in the ecology of entire communities and ecosystems. However, the effects of these large-wildlife declines on other taxa likely hinge upon both underlying abiotic properties of these systems and on the types of secondary anthropogenic changes associated with wildlife loss, making impacts difficult to predict. To better understand how these important contextual factors determine the consequences of large-wildlife declines on other animals in a community, we examined the effects of three common forms of large-wildlife loss (removal without replacement [using fences], removal followed by replacement with domestic stock, and removal accompanied by crop agricultural use) on small-mammal abundance, diversity, and community composition, in landscapes that varied in several abiotic attributes (rainfall, soil fertility, land-use intensity) in central Kenya. We found that small-mammal communities were indeed heavily impacted by all forms of large-wildlife decline, showing, on average: (1) higher densities, (2) lower species richness per site, and (3) different species assemblages in sites from which large wildlife were removed. However, the nature and magnitude of these effects were strongly context dependent. Rainfall, type of land-use change, and the interaction of these two factors were key predictors of both the magnitude and type of responses of small mammals. The strongest effects, particularly abundance responses, tended to be observed in low-rainfall areas. Whereas isolated wildlife removal primarily led to increased small-mammal abundance, wildlife removal associated with secondary uses (agriculture, domestic stock) had much more variable effects on abundance and stronger impacts on diversity and composition. Collectively, these results (1) highlight the importance of context in determining the impacts of large-wildlife decline on small-mammal communities, (2) emphasize the challenges in extrapolating results from controlled experimental studies to predict the effects of wildlife declines that are accompanied by secondary land-uses, and (3) suggest that, because of the context-dependent nature of the responses to large-wildlife decline, large-wildlife status alone cannot be reliably used to predict small-mammal community changes.
- Published
- 2015
22. Water sources aggregate parasites with increasing effects in more arid conditions
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Titcomb, Georgia, Mantas, John Naisikie, Hulke, Jenna, Rodriguez, Ivan, Branch, Douglas, and Young, Hillary
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- 2021
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23. Positive and Negative Effects of a Threatened Parrotfish on Reef Ecosystems
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MCCAULEY, DOUGLAS J, YOUNG, HILLARY S, GUEVARA, ROGER, WILLIAMS, GARETH J, POWER, ELEANOR A, DUNBAR, ROBERT B, BIRD, DOUGLAS W, DURHAM, WILLIAM H, and MICHELI, FIORENZA
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Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation ,Ecological Applications ,Biological Sciences ,Ecology ,Environmental Management ,Environmental Sciences ,Life on Land ,Animals ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,Coral Reefs ,Endangered Species ,Feeding Behavior ,Food Chain ,Models ,Biological ,Perciformes ,Polynesia ,benthic ,Bolbometopon ,coral ,function ,diversity ,management ,simulation ,threatened species ,Béntico ,diversidad ,especie amenazada ,función ,manejo ,simulación ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Zoology ,Environmental management - Abstract
Species that are strong interactors play disproportionately important roles in the dynamics of natural ecosystems. It has been proposed that their presence is necessary for positively shaping the structure and functioning of ecosystems. We evaluated this hypothesis using the case of the world's largest parrotfish (Bolbometopon muricatum), a globally imperiled species. We used direct observation, animal tracking, and computer simulations to examine the diverse routes through which B. muricatum affects the diversity, dispersal, relative abundance, and survival of the corals that comprise the foundation of reef ecosystems. Our results suggest that this species can influence reef building corals in both positive and negative ways. Field observation and simulation outputs indicated that B. muricatum reduced the abundance of macroalgae that can outcompete corals, but they also feed directly on corals, decreasing coral abundance, diversity, and colony size. B. muricatum appeared to facilitate coral advancement by mechanically dispersing coral fragments and opening up bare space for coral settlement, but they also damaged adult corals and remobilized a large volume of potentially stressful carbonate sediment. The impacts this species has on reefs appears to be regulated in part by its abundance-the effects of B. muricatum were more intense in simulation scenarios populated with high densities of these fish. Observations conducted in regions with high and low predator (e.g., sharks) abundance generated results that are consistent with the hypothesis that these predators of B. muricatum may play a role in governing their abundance; thus, predation may modulate the intensity of the effects they have on reef dynamics. Overall our results illustrate that functionally unique and threatened species may not have universally positive impacts on ecosystems and that it may be necessary for environmental managers to consider the diverse effects of such species and the forces that mediate the strength of their influence.
- Published
- 2014
24. Reliance of mobile species on sensitive habitats: a case study of manta rays (Manta alfredi) and lagoons
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McCauley, Douglas J, DeSalles, Paul A, Young, Hillary S, Papastamatiou, Yannis P, Caselle, Jennifer E, Deakos, Mark H, Gardner, Jonathan PA, Garton, David W, Collen, John D, and Micheli, Fiorenza
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Environmental Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Marine Biology & Hydrobiology - Abstract
Quantifying the ecological importance of individual habitats to highly mobile animals is challenging because patterns of habitat reliance for these taxa are complex and difficult to observe. We investigated the importance of lagoons to the manta ray, Manta alfredi, a wide-ranging and vulnerable species in a less-disturbed atoll ecosystem. Lagoons are highly sensitive to anthropogenic disturbance and are known to be ecologically important to a wide variety of mobile species. We used a novel combination of research tools to examine the reliance of M. alfredi on lagoon habitats. Stable isotope analysis was used to assay the recent energetic importance of lagoons to M. alfredi; high-resolution tracking data provided information about how M. alfredi utilised lagoonal habitats over long and short time periods; acoustic cameras logged patterns of animal entrances and departures from lagoons; and photo identification/laser photogrammetry provided some insight into why they may be using this habitat. M. alfredi showed strong evidence of energetic dependence on lagoon resources during the course of the study and spent long periods of residence within lagoons or frequently transited into them from elsewhere. While within lagoons, they demonstrated affinities for particular structural features within this habitat and showed evidence of temporal patterning in habitat utilization. This work sheds light on how and why M. alfredi uses lagoons and raises questions about how this use may be altered in disturbed settings. More generally, these observations contribute to our knowledge of how to assess the ecological importance of particular habitats situated within the broader home range of mobile consumers. © 2014 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
- Published
- 2014
25. Declines in large wildlife increase landscape-level prevalence of rodent-borne disease in Africa
- Author
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Young, Hillary S, Dirzo, Rodolfo, Helgen, Kristofer M, McCauley, Douglas J, Billeter, Sarah A, Kosoy, Michael Y, Osikowicz, Lynn M, Salkeld, Daniel J, Young, Truman P, and Dittmar, Katharina
- Subjects
Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Aetiology ,Infection ,Life on Land ,Good Health and Well Being ,Africa ,Eastern ,Animals ,Animals ,Wild ,Bartonella Infections ,Biodiversity ,Ecosystem ,Flea Infestations ,Humans ,Kenya ,Lice Infestations ,Prevalence ,Risk Factors ,Rodent Diseases ,Rodentia ,Xenopsylla ,Zoonoses ,dilution effect - Abstract
Populations of large wildlife are declining on local and global scales. The impacts of this pulse of size-selective defaunation include cascading changes to smaller animals, particularly rodents, and alteration of many ecosystem processes and services, potentially involving changes to prevalence and transmission of zoonotic disease. Understanding linkages between biodiversity loss and zoonotic disease is important for both public health and nature conservation programs, and has been a source of much recent scientific debate. In the case of rodent-borne zoonoses, there is strong conceptual support, but limited empirical evidence, for the hypothesis that defaunation, the loss of large wildlife, increases zoonotic disease risk by directly or indirectly releasing controls on rodent density. We tested this hypothesis by experimentally excluding large wildlife from a savanna ecosystem in East Africa, and examining changes in prevalence and abundance of Bartonella spp. infection in rodents and their flea vectors. We found no effect of wildlife removal on per capita prevalence of Bartonella infection in either rodents or fleas. However, because rodent and, consequently, flea abundance doubled following experimental defaunation, the density of infected hosts and infected fleas was roughly twofold higher in sites where large wildlife was absent. Thus, defaunation represents an elevated risk in Bartonella transmission to humans (bartonellosis). Our results (i) provide experimental evidence of large wildlife defaunation increasing landscape-level disease prevalence, (ii) highlight the importance of susceptible host regulation pathways and host/vector density responses in biodiversity-disease relationships, and (iii) suggest that rodent-borne disease responses to large wildlife loss may represent an important context where this relationship is largely negative.
- Published
- 2014
26. Differential plant damage due to litterfall in palm-dominated forest stands in a Central Pacific atoll
- Author
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Young, Hillary S, McCauley, Douglas J, Pollock, Amanda, and Dirzo, Rodolfo
- Subjects
Cocos nucifera ,diversity ,island ,litterfall ,palm ,regeneration ,Ecology ,Anthropology - Abstract
High densities of palms are common in many tropical forests. In some cases, the dominance of palms has been associated with a depauperate understorey and high rates of native seedling mortality. A variety of different potential mechanisms has been suggested to explain the sustained palm dominance in the understorey and canopy of these forests. Working in a Cocos nucifera-dominated wet tropical forest at Palmyra Atoll in the central Pacific, we examine how litterfall from this pantropical, and economically important palm, impacts seedling survival. We compare rates of litterfall, and rates of litterfall-associated damage, between forest stands dominated by C. nucifera (coconut palm) and forest stands with low abundance of C. nucifera. To assess litterfall damage we survey damage to both artificial seedlings (n = 711), outplanted real seedlings of two species (with and without protection via caging; n = 204), and standing rates of litterfall damage. We find that rates of large-litterfall damage were an average of five times higher in sites with high densities of C. nucifera. Associated with these increases we observe that levels of physical damage to artificial model seedlings caused by litterfall over a 4-mo period increased from 4.9% in sites with low abundance of C. nucifera to 16.1% in sites with high abundance of C. nucifera. Extrapolated to annual rates, litterfall damage of this magnitude exceeds the average levels observed in other published studies. Living native seedlings also showed more than 300% higher levels of mortality in forest stands with high densities of C. nucifera, a difference that was greatly reduced when protected by caging from litterfall. In contrast, uncaged C. nucifera seedlings actually had slightly higher survivorship in habitats dominated by conspecifics. We suggest that litterfall damage may be an important mechanism by which this tropical palm reaches and maintains near monodominance in many coastal and insular habitats. © 2014 Cambridge University Press.
- Published
- 2014
27. Pushing back against paper-park pushers – Reply to Craigie et al.
- Author
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McCauley, Douglas J, Young, Hillary S, Power, Eleanor A, Bird, Douglas W, Durham, William H, McInturff, Alex, Dunbar, Robert B, and Micheli, Fiorenza
- Subjects
Environmental Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Ecology - Published
- 2014
28. Cattle aggregations at shared resources create potential parasite exposure hotspots for wildlife
- Author
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Titcomb, Georgia, primary, Hulke, Jenna, additional, Mantas, John Naisikie, additional, Gituku, Benard, additional, and Young, Hillary, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Correction to 'Migration in the Anthropocene: how collective navigation, environmental system and taxonomy shape the vulnerability of migratory species'
- Author
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Hardesty-Moore, Molly, Deinet, Stefanie, Freeman, Robin, Titcomb, Georgia C., Dillon, Erin M., Stears, Keenan, Klope, Maggie, Bui, An, Orr, Devyn, Young, Hillary S., Kuile, Ana Miller-ter, Hughey, Lacey F., and McCauley, Douglas J.
- Published
- 2018
30. Migration in the Anthropocene : how collective navigation, environmental system and taxonomy shape the vulnerability of migratory species
- Author
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Hardesty-Moore, Molly, Deinet, Stefanie, Freeman, Robin, Titcomb, Georgia C., Dillon, Erin M., Stears, Keenan, Klope, Maggie, Bui, An, Orr, Devyn, Young, Hillary S., Kuile, Ana Miller-ter, Hughey, Lacey F., and McCauley, Douglas J.
- Published
- 2018
31. What explains tick proliferation following large-herbivore exclusion?
- Author
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Titcomb, Georgia, Pringle, Robert M., Palmer, Todd M., and Young, Hillary S.
- Published
- 2018
32. Conservation at the edges of the world
- Author
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McCauley, Douglas J, Power, Eleanor A, Bird, Douglas W, McInturff, Alex, Dunbar, Robert B, Durham, William H, Micheli, Fiorenza, and Young, Hillary S
- Subjects
Life on Land ,Remote ,Ecosystem service ,Tourism ,Community ,Biodiversity ,Conservation ,GIS ,Protected area ,Environmental Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Ecology - Abstract
Remote areas harbor some of the world's most undisturbed ecosystems. Major conservation gains can be made by effectively protecting nature in these remote zones. Conducting conservation work in remote settings presents both unique challenges and promising opportunities. We discuss how five commonly used approaches for conservation (buy and protect conservation; conservation motivated by the intrinsic values of nature; ecosystem service based conservation; ecotourism driven conservation; and conservation enabled by community planning) can be optimally applied to protect ecosystems in these special settings. In this discussion we draw examples from two model remote sites: Palmyra and Tabuaeran Atolls. Spatial analyses conducted using population density as a proxy for remoteness indicate that many existing recognized protected areas already include remote regions, but that the vast majority of the overall remote zones on the planet are not yet formally protected. Initiating discussions that directly consider both the roadblocks and opportunities for conservation in remote areas will help increase our odds of successfully protecting biodiversity in these unique and strategically important contexts. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd.
- Published
- 2013
33. Night shift: expansion of temporal niche use following reductions in predator density.
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McCauley, Douglas J, Hoffmann, Eva, Young, Hillary S, and Micheli, Fiorenza
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Animals ,Fishes ,Predatory Behavior ,Darkness ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Predation shapes many fundamental aspects of ecology. Uncertainty remains, however, about whether predators can influence patterns of temporal niche construction at ecologically relevant timescales. Partitioning of time is an important mechanism by which prey avoid interactions with predators. However, the traits that control a prey organism's capacity to operate during a particular portion of the diel cycle are diverse and complex. Thus, diel prey niches are often assumed to be relatively unlikely to respond to changes in predation risk at short timescales. Here we present evidence to the contrary. We report results that suggest that the anthropogenic depletion of daytime active predators (species that are either diurnal or cathemeral) in a coral reef ecosystem is associated with rapid temporal niche expansions in a multi-species assemblage of nocturnal prey fishes. Diurnal comparisons of nocturnal prey fish abundance in predator rich and predator depleted reefs at two atolls revealed that nocturnal fish were approximately six (biomass) and eight (density) times more common during the day on predator depleted reefs. Amongst these, the prey species that likely were the most specialized for nocturnal living, and thus the most vulnerable to predation (i.e. those with greatest eye size to body length ratio), showed the strongest diurnal increases at sites where daytime active predators were rare. While we were unable to determine whether these observed increases in diurnal abundance by nocturnal prey were the result of a numerical or behavioral response, either effect could be ecologically significant. These results raise the possibility that predation may play an important role in regulating the partitioning of time by prey and that anthropogenic depletions of predators may be capable of causing rapid changes to key properties of temporal community architecture.
- Published
- 2012
34. Acute effects of removing large fish from a near-pristine coral reef
- Author
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McCauley, Douglas J., Micheli, Fiorenza, Young, Hillary S., Tittensor, Derek P., Brumbaugh, Daniel R., Madin, Elizabeth M., Holmes, Katherine E., Smith, Jennifer E., Lotze, Heike K., DeSalles, Paul A., Arnold, Suzanne N., and Worm, Boris
- Subjects
Life Sciences ,Zoology ,Oceanography ,Biomedicine general ,Ecology ,Microbiology - Abstract
Large animals are severely depleted in many ecosystems, yet we are only beginning to understand the ecological implications of their loss. To empirically measure the short-term effects of removing large animals from an ocean ecosystem, we used exclosures to remove large fish from a near-pristine coral reef at Palmyra Atoll, Central Pacific Ocean. We identified a range of effects that followed from the removal of these large fish. These effects were revealed within weeks of their removal. Removing large fish (1) altered the behavior of prey fish; (2) reduced rates of herbivory on certain species of reef algae; (3) had both direct positive (reduced mortality of coral recruits) and indirect negative (through reduced grazing pressure on competitive algae) impacts on recruiting corals; and (4) tended to decrease abundances of small mobile benthic invertebrates. Results of this kind help advance our understanding of the ecological importance of large animals in ecosystems.
- Published
- 2010
35. Interacting effects of wildlife loss and climate on ticks and tick-borne disease
- Author
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Titcomb, Georgia, Allan, Brian F., Ainsworth, Tyler, Henson, Lauren, Hedlund, Tyler, Pringle, Robert M., Palmer, Todd M., Njoroge, Laban, Campana, Michael G., Fleischer, Robert C., Mantas, John Naisikie, and Young, Hillary S.
- Published
- 2017
36. Parasite responses to large mammal loss in an African savanna
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Weinstein, Sara, Titcomb, Georgia, Agwanda, Bernard, Riginos, Corinna, and Young, Hillary
- Published
- 2017
37. Human infectious disease burdens decrease with urbanization but not with biodiversity
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Wood, Chelsea L., McInturff, Alex, Young, Hillary S., Kim, DoHyung, and Lafferty, Kevin D.
- Published
- 2017
38. Introduction: Conservation, biodiversity and infectious disease: scientific evidence and policy implications
- Author
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Young, Hillary S., Wood, Chelsea L., Kilpatrick, A. Marm, Lafferty, Kevin D., Nunn, Charles L., and Vincent, Jeffrey R.
- Published
- 2017
39. Interacting effects of land use and climate on rodent-borne pathogens incentral Kenya
- Author
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Young, Hillary S., McCauley, Douglas J., Dirzo, Rodolfo, Nunn, Charles L., Campana, Michael G., Agwanda, Bernard, Otarola-Castillo, Erik R., Pringle, Robert M., Veblen, Kari E., Salkeld, Daniel J., Stewardson, Kristin, Fleischer, Robert, Lambin, Eric F., Palmer, Todd M., and Helgen, Kristofer M.
- Published
- 2017
40. Nothing lasts forever: Dominant species decline under rapid environmental change in global grasslands
- Author
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Wilfahrt, Peter A., primary, Seabloom, Eric W., additional, Bakker, Jonathan D., additional, Biederman, Lori, additional, Bugalho, Miguel N., additional, Cadotte, Marc W., additional, Caldeira, Maria C., additional, Catford, Jane A., additional, Chen, Qingqing, additional, Donohue, Ian, additional, Ebeling, Anne, additional, Eisenhauer, Nico, additional, Haider, Sylvia, additional, Heckman, Robert W., additional, Jentsch, Anke, additional, Koerner, Sally E., additional, Komatsu, Kimberly J., additional, Laungani, Ramesh, additional, MacDougall, Andrew, additional, Martina, Jason P., additional, Martinson, Holly, additional, Moore, Joslin L., additional, Niu, Yujie, additional, Ohlert, Timothy, additional, Venterink, Harry Olde, additional, Orr, Devyn, additional, Peri, Pablo, additional, Pos, Edwin, additional, Price, Jodi, additional, Raynaud, Xavier, additional, Ren, Zhengwei, additional, Roscher, Christiane, additional, Smith, Nicholas G., additional, Stevens, Carly J., additional, Sullivan, Lauren L., additional, Tedder, Michelle, additional, Tognetti, Pedro M., additional, Veen, Ciska, additional, Wheeler, George, additional, Young, Alyssa L., additional, Young, Hillary, additional, and Borer, Elizabeth T., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Interactions between temperature and predation impact insect emergence in alpine lakes
- Author
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Owens, Caroline H., primary, Lee, Michelle J., additional, Grim, Melissa, additional, Schroeder, John, additional, and Young, Hillary S., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Refining seabird marine protected areas by predicting habitat inside foraging range - a case study from the global tropics
- Author
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Miller, Mark, Hemson, Graham, Toit, Julie Du, Mcdougall, Andrew, Miller, Peter, Mizutani, Akira, Trevail, Alice, Small, Alison, Ravache, Andreas, Beard, Annalea, Bunce, Ashley, Poli, Caroline, Surman, Chris, Gonzalez-zamora, Diego, Clingham, Elizabeth, Vidal, Eric, Mcduie, Fiona, Machovsky-capuska, Gabriel, Cumming, Graeme, Humphries, Grant, Weimerskirch, Henri, Shamoun-baranes, Judy, Henry, Leeann, Wood, Hannah, Young, Hillary, Kohno, Hiroyoshi, Gonzalez-sols, Jacob, Cecere, Jacopo, Veen, Jan, Neumann, Jessica, Shephard, Jill, Green, Jonathan, Castillo-guerrero, José, Sommerfeld, Julia, Dossa, Justine, Bourgeois, Karen, Yoda, Ken, Mcleay, Lachlan, Calabrese, Licia, Mendez, Loriane, Soanes, Louise, Nicoll, Malcolm, Derhé, Mia, Gilmour, Morgan, Diop, Ngone, James, Nicholas, Carr, Pete, Austin, Rhiannon, Freeman, Robin, Clarke, Rohan, Mott, Rowan, Maxwell, Sarah, Saldanha, Sarah, Shaffer, Scott, Oppel, S., Votier, Stephen, Yamamoto, Takashi, Militão, Teresa, Beger, Maria, and Congdon, Bradley
- Subjects
Transferability ,Great Barrier Reef ,Foraging niche ,Foraging Radius ,Ecological Niche Model ,Marine Protected Area - Abstract
Conservation of breeding seabirds typically requires detailed data on where they feed at sea. Ecological niche models (ENMs) can fill data gaps, but rarely perform well when transferred to new regions. Alternatively, the foraging radius approach simply encircles the sea surrounding a breeding seabird colony (a foraging circle), but overestimates foraging habitat. Here, we investigate whether ENMs can transfer (predict) foraging niches of breeding tropical seabirds between global colonies, and whether ENMs can refine foraging circles. We collate a large global dataset of tropical seabird tracks (12000 trips, 16 species, 60 colonies) to build a comprehensive summary of tropical seabird foraging ranges and to train ENMs. We interrogate ENM transferability and assess the confidence with which unsuitable habitat predicted by ENMs can be excluded from within foraging circles. We apply this refinement framework to the Great Barrier Reef (GBR), Australia to identify a network of candidate marine protected areas (MPAs) for seabirds. We found little ability to generalise and transfer breeding tropical seabird foraging niches across all colonies for any species (mean AUC: 0.56, range 0.4-0.82). Low global transferability was partially explained by colony clusters that predicted well internally but other colony clusters poorly. After refinement with ENMs, foraging circles still contained 89% of known foraging areas from tracking data, providing confidence that important foraging habitat was not erroneously excluded by greater refinement from high transferability ENMs nor minor refinement from low transferability ENMs. Foraging radii estimated the total foraging area of the GBR breeding seabird community as 2,941,000 km2, which was refined by excluding between 197,000 km2 and 1,826,000 km2 of unsuitable foraging habitat. ENMs trained on local GBR tracking achieved superior refinement over globally trained models, demonstrating the value of local tracking. Our framework demonstrates an effective method to delineate candidate MPAs for breeding seabirds in data-poor regions.
- Published
- 2023
43. Across Ecosystem Boundaries: Effects of Introduced Trout in California’s Sierra Nevada
- Author
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Owens, Caroline Herrmann, Young, Hillary S1, Owens, Caroline Herrmann, Owens, Caroline Herrmann, Young, Hillary S1, and Owens, Caroline Herrmann
- Abstract
Influences of species introductions are context dependent and can extend from nutrient pools and fluxes to predator populations and behavior. Trout stocking is a classic example of a globally pervasive introduction where a single species can cause whole system changes and cross-boundary effects. Omnivorous trout consume the larvae of aquatic insects, reducing insect emergence that otherwise provides a nutrient and energy subsidy to terrestrial systems. In this dissertation I first ask whether multiple stressors (trout presence and lake temperature) have interactive effects on aquatic insect emergence. I then ask how the presence of trout affects nitrogen patterns in near-shore terrestrial zones. As a testing site for these questions I use a set of lakes in California’s Sierra Nevada where trout have been both introduced and removed over the past century, establishing a natural experiment. Across paired lakes with and without fish I examine the effects of trout presence on within-lake communities and across the aquatic-terrestrial ecotone. I conducted multiple years of field surveys in which I sampled insect communities, soil and lake sediment characteristics, and stable isotope signatures of terrestrial soils and plants, and quantified algal biomass in the littoral benthic zone of each lake. I find that insect emergence is significantly lower from lakes with trout, as expected, but also from warmer lakes – and that the impact of trout is lessened in warmer lakes. My data confirm that trout are associated with reduced insect deposition to terrestrial near-shore areas. Despite this reduction in insect-vectored nutrients, I also find a positive relationship between trout presence and nitrogen content of both soils and plants. By producing a detailed record of trout impacts 1) across climatic conditions and 2) to multiple trophic levels, in this dissertation I highlight the context dependencies of introduced species effects and expand understanding of how trout alter la
- Published
- 2023
44. Investigating drivers of plant and pollinator communities and their interactions
- Author
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Lee, Michelle Jasmine, Young, Hillary S1, Lee, Michelle Jasmine, Lee, Michelle Jasmine, Young, Hillary S1, and Lee, Michelle Jasmine
- Abstract
Environmental disturbances and biodiversity turnover in the Anthropocene increasingly threaten species interactions – the scaffolding of ecosystems. Plant and pollinator communities and their interactions provide ecosystem functions and services (i.e., pollination) that are biologically and economically critical. Species interactions are particularly vulnerable to environmental disturbances because each interacting group can be individually impacted with a resulting loss of the interaction. Importantly, environmental disturbances that threaten biodiversity rarely occur in isolation and, rather, occur in combination with regional and local scale effects. To protect ecosystem functions and services, and thus, the interactions between species, we must first collect a realistic understanding of the multiple stressors that can affect species, interactions, and ecosystem structure. This dissertation takes an empirical approach to understanding plant and pollinator communities, investigating: (1) the relative effects of multiple environmental attributes on plant-pollinator network structure, (2) the relative effects of regional climate and species introduction across ecosystem boundaries on plant community diversity, and (3) the bottom-up or top-down effects of regional and local stressors on plant reproduction.Through these studies, we find that the amount of available habitat and the quality of habitat is vital for the diversity of both plant and pollinator communities and the resulting complexity and frequency of their interactions. Importantly, habitat quality could be especially influential where resources are limited. These findings support the integration of habitat quality into conservation planning in order to mitigate the effects of multiple stressors on species interactions across landscapes. This work confirms conservation goals such as prioritizing habitat size in reserve planning, but also encourages a more comprehensive examination of the impacts of introduc
- Published
- 2023
45. Nothing lasts forever:Dominant species decline under rapid environmental change in global grasslands
- Author
-
Wilfahrt, Peter A., Seabloom, Eric W., Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori, Bugalho, Miguel N., Cadotte, Marc W., Caldeira, Maria C., Catford, Jane A., Chen, Qingqing, Donohue, Ian, Ebeling, Anne, Eisenhauer, Nico, Haider, Sylvia, Heckman, Robert W., Jentsch, Anke, Koerner, Sally E., Komatsu, Kimberly J., Laungani, Ramesh, MacDougall, Andrew, Martina, Jason P., Martinson, Holly, Moore, Joslin L., Niu, Yujie, Ohlert, Timothy, Venterink, Harry Olde, Orr, Devyn, Peri, Pablo, Pos, Edwin, Price, Jodi, Raynaud, Xavier, Ren, Zhengwei, Roscher, Christiane, Smith, Nicholas G., Stevens, Carly J., Sullivan, Lauren L., Tedder, Michelle, Tognetti, Pedro M., Veen, Ciska, Wheeler, George, Young, Alyssa L., Young, Hillary, Borer, Elizabeth T., Wilfahrt, Peter A., Seabloom, Eric W., Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori, Bugalho, Miguel N., Cadotte, Marc W., Caldeira, Maria C., Catford, Jane A., Chen, Qingqing, Donohue, Ian, Ebeling, Anne, Eisenhauer, Nico, Haider, Sylvia, Heckman, Robert W., Jentsch, Anke, Koerner, Sally E., Komatsu, Kimberly J., Laungani, Ramesh, MacDougall, Andrew, Martina, Jason P., Martinson, Holly, Moore, Joslin L., Niu, Yujie, Ohlert, Timothy, Venterink, Harry Olde, Orr, Devyn, Peri, Pablo, Pos, Edwin, Price, Jodi, Raynaud, Xavier, Ren, Zhengwei, Roscher, Christiane, Smith, Nicholas G., Stevens, Carly J., Sullivan, Lauren L., Tedder, Michelle, Tognetti, Pedro M., Veen, Ciska, Wheeler, George, Young, Alyssa L., Young, Hillary, and Borer, Elizabeth T.
- Abstract
Dominance often indicates one or a few species being best suited for resource capture and retention in a given environment. Press perturbations that change availability of limiting resources can restructure competitive hierarchies, allowing new species to capture or retain resources and leaving once dominant species fated to decline. However, dominant species may maintain high abundances even when their new environments no longer favour them due to stochastic processes associated with their high abundance, impeding deterministic processes that would otherwise diminish them. Here, we quantify the persistence of dominance by tracking the rate of decline in dominant species at 90 globally distributed grassland sites under experimentally elevated soil nutrient supply and reduced vertebrate consumer pressure. We found that chronic experimental nutrient addition and vertebrate exclusion caused certain subsets of species to lose dominance more quickly than in control plots. In control plots, perennial species and species with high initial cover maintained dominance for longer than annual species and those with low initial cover respectively. In fertilized plots, species with high initial cover maintained dominance at similar rates to control plots, while those with lower initial cover lost dominance even faster than similar species in controls. High initial cover increased the estimated time to dominance loss more strongly in plots with vertebrate exclosures than in controls. Vertebrate exclosures caused a slight decrease in the persistence of dominance for perennials, while fertilization brought perennials' rate of dominance loss in line with those of annuals. Annual species lost dominance at similar rates regardless of treatments. Synthesis. Collectively, these results point to a strong role of a species' historical abundance in maintaining dominance following environmental perturbations. Because dominant species play an outsized role in driving ecosystem processes, thei
- Published
- 2023
46. Active breeding seabirds prospect alternative breeding colonies
- Author
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Institut Polaire Français Paul Emile Victor, Office français de la biodiversité (France), North Pacific Research Board, Istituto Superiore per la Protezione e la Ricerca Ambientale, Ministero della Transizione Ecologica, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministère de la Transition écologique et de la Cohésion des territoires (France), European Commission, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (US), Diputación Foral de Gipuzkoa, Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources (Germany), Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Germany), Bristol Robotics Laboratory, Interreg, National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, Wildlife Services (US), Oregon State University, Kralj, Jelena [0000-0002-1500-5897], Kralj, Jelena, Ponchon, Aurore, Oro, Daniel, Amadesi, Barbara, Arizaga, Juan, Baccetti, Nicola, Boulinier, Thierry, Cecere, Jacopo G., Corcoran, Robin M., Corman, Anna-Marie, Enners, Leonie, Fleishman, Abram, Garthe, Stefan, Grémillet, David, Harding, Ann, Igual, José Manuel, Jurinović, Luka, Kubetzki, Ulrike, Lyons, Donald E, Orben, Rachael, Paredes, Rosana, Pirrello, Simone, Recorbet, Bernard, Shaffer, Scott A., Schwemmer, Philipp, Serra, Lorenzo, Spelt, Anouk, Tavecchia, Giacomo, Tengeres, Jill, Tome, Davorin, Williamson, Cara, Windsor, Shane, Young, Hillary, Zenatello, Marco, Fijn, Ruben, Institut Polaire Français Paul Emile Victor, Office français de la biodiversité (France), North Pacific Research Board, Istituto Superiore per la Protezione e la Ricerca Ambientale, Ministero della Transizione Ecologica, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministère de la Transition écologique et de la Cohésion des territoires (France), European Commission, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (US), Diputación Foral de Gipuzkoa, Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources (Germany), Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Germany), Bristol Robotics Laboratory, Interreg, National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, Wildlife Services (US), Oregon State University, Kralj, Jelena [0000-0002-1500-5897], Kralj, Jelena, Ponchon, Aurore, Oro, Daniel, Amadesi, Barbara, Arizaga, Juan, Baccetti, Nicola, Boulinier, Thierry, Cecere, Jacopo G., Corcoran, Robin M., Corman, Anna-Marie, Enners, Leonie, Fleishman, Abram, Garthe, Stefan, Grémillet, David, Harding, Ann, Igual, José Manuel, Jurinović, Luka, Kubetzki, Ulrike, Lyons, Donald E, Orben, Rachael, Paredes, Rosana, Pirrello, Simone, Recorbet, Bernard, Shaffer, Scott A., Schwemmer, Philipp, Serra, Lorenzo, Spelt, Anouk, Tavecchia, Giacomo, Tengeres, Jill, Tome, Davorin, Williamson, Cara, Windsor, Shane, Young, Hillary, Zenatello, Marco, and Fijn, Ruben
- Abstract
Compared to other animal movements, prospecting by adult individuals for a future breeding site is commonly overlooked. Prospecting influences the decision of where to breed and has consequences on fitness and lifetime reproductive success. By analysing movements of 31 satellite- and GPS-tracked gull and tern populations belonging to 14 species in Europe and North America, we examined the occurrence and factors explaining prospecting by actively breeding birds. Prospecting in active breeders occurred in 85.7% of studied species, across 61.3% of sampled populations. Prospecting was more common in populations with frequent inter-annual changes of breeding sites and among females. These results contradict theoretical models which predict that prospecting is expected to evolve in relatively predictable and stable environments. More long-term tracking studies are needed to identify factors affecting patterns of prospecting in different environments and understand the consequences of prospecting on fitness at the individual and population level.
- Published
- 2023
47. Nothing lasts forever: Dominant species decline under rapid environmental change in global grasslands
- Author
-
Wilfahrt, Peter A., Seabloom, Eric W., Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori, Bugalho, Miguel N., Cadotte, Marc W., Caldeira, Maria C., Catford, Jane A., Chen, Qingqing, Donohue, Ian, Ebeling, Anne, Eisenhauer, Nico, Haider, Sylvia, Heckman, Robert W., Jentsch, Anke, Koerner, Sally E., Komatsu, Kimberly J., Laungani, Ramesh, MacDougall, Andrew, Martina, Jason P., Martinson, Holly, Moore, Joslin L., Niu, Yujie, Ohlert, Timothy, Venterink, Harry Olde, Orr, Devyn, Peri, Pablo, Pos, Edwin, Price, Jodi, Raynaud, Xavier, Ren, Zhengwei, Roscher, Christiane, Smith, Nicholas G., Stevens, Carly J., Sullivan, Lauren L., Tedder, Michelle, Tognetti, Pedro M., Veen, Ciska, Wheeler, George, Young, Alyssa L., Young, Hillary, Borer, Elizabeth T., Wilfahrt, Peter A., Seabloom, Eric W., Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori, Bugalho, Miguel N., Cadotte, Marc W., Caldeira, Maria C., Catford, Jane A., Chen, Qingqing, Donohue, Ian, Ebeling, Anne, Eisenhauer, Nico, Haider, Sylvia, Heckman, Robert W., Jentsch, Anke, Koerner, Sally E., Komatsu, Kimberly J., Laungani, Ramesh, MacDougall, Andrew, Martina, Jason P., Martinson, Holly, Moore, Joslin L., Niu, Yujie, Ohlert, Timothy, Venterink, Harry Olde, Orr, Devyn, Peri, Pablo, Pos, Edwin, Price, Jodi, Raynaud, Xavier, Ren, Zhengwei, Roscher, Christiane, Smith, Nicholas G., Stevens, Carly J., Sullivan, Lauren L., Tedder, Michelle, Tognetti, Pedro M., Veen, Ciska, Wheeler, George, Young, Alyssa L., Young, Hillary, and Borer, Elizabeth T.
- Abstract
Dominance often indicates one or a few species being best suited for resource capture and retention in a given environment. Press perturbations that change availability of limiting resources can restructure competitive hierarchies, allowing new species to capture or retain resources and leaving once dominant species fated to decline. However, dominant species may maintain high abundances even when their new environments no longer favour them due to stochastic processes associated with their high abundance, impeding deterministic processes that would otherwise diminish them. Here, we quantify the persistence of dominance by tracking the rate of decline in dominant species at 90 globally distributed grassland sites under experimentally elevated soil nutrient supply and reduced vertebrate consumer pressure. We found that chronic experimental nutrient addition and vertebrate exclusion caused certain subsets of species to lose dominance more quickly than in control plots. In control plots, perennial species and species with high initial cover maintained dominance for longer than annual species and those with low initial cover respectively. In fertilized plots, species with high initial cover maintained dominance at similar rates to control plots, while those with lower initial cover lost dominance even faster than similar species in controls. High initial cover increased the estimated time to dominance loss more strongly in plots with vertebrate exclosures than in controls. Vertebrate exclosures caused a slight decrease in the persistence of dominance for perennials, while fertilization brought perennials' rate of dominance loss in line with those of annuals. Annual species lost dominance at similar rates regardless of treatments. Synthesis. Collectively, these results point to a strong role of a species' historical abundance in maintaining dominance following environmental perturbations. Because dominant species play an outsized role in driving ecosystem processes, t
- Published
- 2023
48. Does biodiversity protect humans against infectious disease? Reply
- Author
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Wood, Chelsea L., Lafferty, Kevin D., DeLeo, Giulio, Young, Hillary S., Hudson, Peter J., and Kuris, Armand M.
- Published
- 2016
49. Patterns, Causes, and Consequences of Anthropocene Defaunation
- Author
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Young, Hillary S., McCauley, Douglas J., Galetti, Mauro, and Dirzo, Rodolfo
- Published
- 2016
50. "She Uses They/Them Pronouns": Finding a Non-Binary Voice in a Gendered World
- Author
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Young, Hillary Jean
- Subjects
Music ,Gender studies ,Performing arts ,Gender ,Music ,Non-Binary ,Queer ,Voice - Abstract
The guiding question of this dissertation is if a non-binary voice is possible, and if so, how? I address this question by analyzing various facets of my creative practice and how I have navigated the ways in which my non-binary gender identity is in conflict with my instrument (which is, arguably, inherently gendered). As part of my analysis, I offer various theoretical frameworks to clarify and illuminate this conflict as it appears in my work. In the introduction, I contextualize my work by reflecting on Sarah Hennies’ Contralto alongside my own relationship with my speaking voice and voice feminization therapy. Chapter 1 and 2 consider technological intervention as a means of liberation as well as oppression; Chapter 1 explores the patterns of silencing the female voice by withholding linguistic meaning from operatic madwomen to 21st century electroacoustic music, whereas Chapter 2 explores the possibilities of vocal effects pedals and a post-gender future. Lastly, Chapter 3 analyzes my band’s multimedia piece, Dawson’sCreamo, and reflects on the early Internet as a queer space.
- Published
- 2019
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