4,281 results
Search Results
52. Effects of stage of colony cycle, context, and intercolony distance on conspecific tolerance by paper wasps (Polistes fuscatus)
- Author
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George J. Gamboa, Robin L. Foster, Angela M. Bitterman, and Julie A. Scope
- Subjects
Polistes fuscatus ,biology ,Kin recognition ,Vespidae ,Ecology ,Zoology ,Context (language use) ,Hymenoptera ,biology.organism_classification ,Brood ,Aculeata ,Animal ecology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
We observed in the field how resident females of the social wasp, Polistes fuscatus, treated female nestmates, non-nestmate first cousins, and unrelated non-nestmates. Behavioral observations were made 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, and 11 weeks after the emergence of a colony's first workers. Resident females were highly tolerant of female nestmates but highly intolerant of unrelated non-nestmates throughout the post-worker-emergence phase of the colony cycle. First cousins were treated either highly tolerantly or highly intolerantly, although most cousins (∼ 63%) were treated highly intolerantly. The treatment of cousins suggests that they are treated either tolerantly (like nestmates) or intolerantly (like unrelated non-nestmates) depending on whether they fall above or below an acceptance threshold, respectively. Resident females did not significantly change their tolerance nestmates, first cousins, and unrelated females between different observation periods. However, all conspecifics were generally treated the most intolerantly 11 weeks post-worker-emergence, a time in the colony cycle when combs no longer contain brood. This decreased tolerance and its associated variance patterns late in the colony cycle are consistent with a more restrictive acceptance threshold. The optimal level of the acceptance threshold appears to be a compromise between the fitness consequences of accepting unrelated non-nestmates and rejecting one's nestmates. In a laboratory study, resident females were equally tolerant of female nestmates on and off the comb but significantly less tolerant of unrelated females on the comb than off the comb. Thus, females can modify their tolerance rapidly in different recognition contexts. In a second laboratory study, resident females were equally intolerant of unrelated females, regardless of whether they were from colonies 50 m or 50 km distant.
- Published
- 1991
53. Rock, Paper, Scissors; Chicken, Human, Swine
- Author
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Aleksei A. Chmura, Peter Daszak, and Sara E. Howard
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Battle ,Swine ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Hesiod ,Medicine in the Arts ,Bestiary ,Art history ,Global Health ,Disease Outbreaks ,Influenza A Virus, H1N1 Subtype ,Influenza, Human ,Animals ,Humans ,Bellerophon ,HERO ,Mexico ,media_common ,Painting ,Ecology ,biology ,Art ,biology.organism_classification ,Animal ecology ,Influenza in Birds ,Greek mythology ,Chickens - Abstract
We watch two children playing the game ‘‘Rock, Paper, Scissors.’’ This game begins as one of random chance, but it rapidly evolves into a mesmerizing interaction of strategy, wit, and memory. The hand is transformed into a weapon, an attack, a defense. Now cutting, now wrapping, now blunting. Fingers become blades; fists become rock; palms become paper. In this issue’s cover art, one part of a triptych by the renowned Mexican artist Abel Vazquez, a most curious fish brings new meaning to that childhood game. This pajaro is a mythical beast, a transformed animal, a bizarre chimera. A bird with human qualities. A bird with a bowler hat. A bird with the tail of a fish. This striking watercolor is a contemporary take on the alebrije figurines first created by the celebrated Mexican artist Pedro Linares in 1936. It was in this year, so the story goes, that Pedro Linares became ill and, while lying feverish in bed, he dreamt of a surreal forest where animals transformed into chimeric forms, each shouting the word ‘‘alebrijes!’’ When Linares awoke, he picked up the nearest material—paper— and molded figures of these chimeric forms, painting them in garish colors remembered through the distortion of severe illness. Linares’ bestiary is now created by his sons and grandsons and a host of ‘‘cartoneros’’ across Mexico. Beautiful winged fish with legs; dragons grasping at decorated skeletons; bejeweled, deformed toad-headed agamids. Like the mythical Chimera of the 9th century B.C. manuscripts by Homer (Iliad, VI and XVI) and Hesiod (The Theogony, ll. 306–332), these beasts are a thing of fascination, curiosity, and fear for humans. While many, like our cover’s image, are harmless, others represent a magnified ability to destroy and kill. A threat to our very existence. A subliminal stab to our psyche. And so, we return to Mexico, to a more dramatic version of ‘‘Rock, Paper, Scissors’’ played out very recently. This time, it’s a game of genetic reassortment—random acts of chemical bonding. But, as in the children’s game, much more than chance guides the outcome. Given the right conditions—high densities of livestock, international trade and travel, and a diversity of migrating birds—we find ourselves in a similar mesmerizing battle, one that pitches our wits against the evolution of our own chimeric H1N1 creation. What can we learn from Greek mythology that might have bearing on the defeat on this modern, man-made chimera? In mythical times, the Greek gods sent a hero, Bellerophon, to destroy the Chimera. He did this by tipping his spear with lead, melting this in the beast’s fiery breath, and skewering the animal and sealing its guts (Iliad, XVI). A gory tale, perhaps, but also a measure of our own fate? With H1N1 influenza now global, and a simmering caseload in Australia ready to burst forth on the Northern Hemisphere’s winter flu season, we are in unknown territory as we scramble for a vaccine. We analyze our chimera’s weapons, its fiery breath, and we design our spears accordingly. But our shifting foe is not the known entity that the ancient Chimera was. Driven by our own actions, it is able to respond to our every move and transform again— evolving resistance, changing virulence. And so, returning to our Mexican artist Abel Vazquez, we watch as he puts down his brush, and silently we wait. This artist is still painting. This triptych is not complete. EcoHealth 6, 159–160, 2009 DOI: 10.1007/s10393-009-0245-x
- Published
- 2009
54. Contributed Papers Integrating Landscape and Metapopulation Modeling Approaches: Viability of the Sharp-Tailed Grouse in a Dynamic Landscape.
- Author
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AKÇAKAYA, H. REŞIT, RADELOFF, VOLKER C., MLADENOFF, DAVID J., and HE, HONG S.
- Subjects
- *
LANDSCAPE ecology , *SHARP-tailed grouse , *ANIMAL populations , *POPULATION biology , *ANIMAL ecology , *BIRD populations - Abstract
The lack of management experience at the landscape scale and the limited feasibility of experiments at this scale have increased the use of scenario modeling to analyze the effects of different management actions on focal species. However, current modeling approaches are poorly suited for the analysis of viability in dynamic landscapes. Demographic (e.g., metapopulation) models of species living in these landscapes do not incorporate the variability in spatial patterns of early successional habitats, and landscape models have not been linked to population viability models. We link a landscape model to a metapopulation model and demonstrate the use of this model by analyzing the effect of forest management options on the viability of the Sharp-tailed Grouse ( ) in the Pine Barrens region of northwestern Wisconsin (U.S.A.). This approach allows viability analysis based on landscape dynamics brought about by processes such as succession, disturbances, and silviculture. The landscape component of the model (LANDIS) predicts forest landscape dynamics in the form of a time series of raster maps. We combined these maps into a time series of patch structures, which formed the dynamic spatial structure of the metapopulation component (RAMAS). Our results showed that the viability of Sharp-tailed Grouse was sensitive to landscape dynamics and demographic variables such as fecundity and mortality. Ignoring the landscape dynamics gave overly optimistic results, and results based only on landscape dynamics (ignoring demography) lead to a different ranking of the management options than the ranking based on the more realistic model incorporating both landscape and demographic dynamics. Thus, models of species in dynamic landscapes must consider habitat and population dynamics simultaneously. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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55. Microbiomes of aquatic animals.
- Author
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Schön, Isa, Fontaneto, Diego, and Peredo, Elena L.
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AQUATIC animals ,MARINE invertebrates ,AQUATIC invertebrates ,ANIMAL ecology ,GUT microbiome ,FRESHWATER zooplankton - Abstract
The fourth one focused on the microbiome of an ostracod (Arthropoda, Crustacea) species, reporting that it was different from the known microbiomes of other freshwater ostracods, but had large variability even among ostracod individuals from the same population. Guest editors: Isa Schön, Diego Fontaneto & Elena L. Peredo / Aquatic Microbiomes The holobiont approach (Bosch & Miller, [2]) in the study of animal ecology places strong emphasis on the strict association between the animals and their microbes, which are beneficial for the host's survival and fitness (Cornwallis et al., [3]). The other paper compared the hindgut microbiome of two fish (Chordata, Actinopterygii) species in an African lake showing that the two fish species had different diets, but not different microbiomes. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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56. Behavioral ecology of Japanese paper wasps,Polistes spp. IV. Comparison of ethograms between queens and workers ofP. chinensis antennalis in the ergonomic stage
- Author
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Eiiti Kasuya
- Subjects
Paper wasp ,biology ,Ecology ,education ,Significant difference ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Polistes spp ,biology.organism_classification ,Polistes chinensis ,Ethogram ,Animal ecology ,Behavioral ecology ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Animal Science and Zoology ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography - Abstract
Behavioral catalogues, transition matrices between 2 consecutive behavioral acts, and the frequency distribution of time spent in each behavioral act were described for queens and workers of a Japanese paper wasp,Polistes chinensis antennalis in the ergonomic stage (the period from the emergence of the first worker to the emergenece of the first reproductive). The results were; (1) The whole behavior repertoire of queens was completely included in that of workers. Workers oviposited frequently in queen-right colonies. (2) The proportion of off-nest activities to the number of total acts for workers was higher than that for queens. The proportion of time spent off the nest in workers was 5 times as high as that in queens. (3) There was no significant difference in the proportion of number of oviposition to the total number of acts between queens and workers. The oviposition rate was 0.06 eggs/h for workers and 0.37 eggs/h for queens. Queens made more dominance behavior and workers more subordinated behavior. Queens made abdomen wagging more frequently than workers. (4) For behavioral acts common in both queens and workers, the mean duration of a specific act was approximately equal for both. The mean duration of unsuccessful flesh collection for workers was 3.4 times as longs as that for queens. Workers did not search for flesh in 10.1% of duration of flesh collections in the field. (5) The pattern of transitions between 2 consecutive behavioral acts in workers was similar to that in queens. (6) Alien workers approaching a nest with a load were more often accepted by the nest occupants than alien workers with no load. Alien workers with no load were not accepted as often as a legitimate nestmates with no load. The reproductive division of labor between queens and workers inP. chinesis antennalis was incomplete. This suggests worker-queen conflict in different reproductive strategies among colony members. Several behaviors were consistent with the view that they are the behavioral expression of this conflict.
- Published
- 1983
57. Behavioral ecology of Japanese paper wasps,Polistes spp. III. Decision making byP. chinensis antennalis foundresses at the departure from nests
- Author
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Eiiti Kasuya
- Subjects
Paper wasp ,Polistes chinensis ,Nest ,Animal ecology ,Ecology ,Behavioral ecology ,Flesh ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Polistes spp ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Intraspecific competition - Abstract
Analysis of the behavior of foundresses of a Japanese paper wasp,Polistes chinensis antennalis Perez, was made to clarify the patterns of decision making. It was found that: (1) Foundresses postponed the next activity off the nest after being attacked by a foundress from another colony. (2) After a spiral flight, the frequency of subsequent spiral flights and patrol flights around the nest increased. (3) Following successful flesh collection, the frequency of flesh collection increased. (4) Following successful flesh collection, the time spent for a single trip of flesh collection increased. It was concluded thatP. chinensis antennalis foundresses solve their dilemma between the need of nest defence and resource gathering by decision making based on intraspecific attacks and the intake of the most difficult resource to obtain.
- Published
- 1983
58. Recent trends in movement ecology of animals and human mobility.
- Author
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Joo, Rocío, Picardi, Simona, Boone, Matthew E., Clay, Thomas A., Patrick, Samantha C., Romero-Romero, Vilma S., and Basille, Mathieu
- Subjects
ANIMAL ecology ,ANIMAL mechanics ,HUMAN ecology ,ENVIRONMENTALISM ,GPS receivers ,ANIMAL navigation - Abstract
Movement is fundamental to life, shaping population dynamics, biodiversity patterns, and ecosystem structure. In 2008, the movement ecology framework (MEF Nathan et al. in PNAS 105(49):19052–19059, 2008) introduced an integrative theory of organismal movement—linking internal state, motion capacity, and navigation capacity to external factors—which has been recognized as a milestone in the field. Since then, the study of movement experienced a technological boom, which provided massive quantities of tracking data of both animal and human movement globally and at ever finer spatio-temporal resolutions. In this work, we provide a quantitative assessment of the state of research within the MEF, focusing on animal movement, including humans and invertebrates, and excluding movement of plants and microorganisms. Using a text mining approach, we digitally scanned the contents of > 8000 papers from 2009 to 2018 available online, identified tools and methods used, and assessed linkages between all components of the MEF. Over the past decade, the publication rate has increased considerably, along with major technological changes, such as an increased use of GPS devices and accelerometers and a majority of studies now using the R software environment for statistical computing. However, animal movement research still largely focuses on the effect of environmental factors on movement, with motion and navigation continuing to receive little attention. A search of topics based on words featured in abstracts revealed a clustering of papers among marine and terrestrial realms, as well as applications and methods across taxa. We discuss the potential for technological and methodological advances in the field to lead to more integrated and interdisciplinary research and an increased exploration of key movement processes such as navigation, as well as the evolutionary, physiological, and life-history consequences of movement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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59. Social relations among females in pre- and postemergence colonies of a subtropical paper wasp,Parapolybia varia (Hymenoptera: Vespidae)
- Author
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Soichi Yamane
- Subjects
Paper wasp ,Vespidae ,Ecology ,Zoology ,Monogyny ,Hymenoptera ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Pupa ,Nest ,Oophagy ,Animal ecology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
In southern Taiwan, most colonies (13 out of 14) ofParapolybia varia were founded by multiple females. Several females were present at the founding and increased up to 25 about one week after it. Observations on 2 pre-emergence colonies (in a total of 21 h) and those on 4 postemergence colonies (in 62 h) revealed the following facts: In the pre-emergence period, the top-ranking female dominated all others like a despot. Some females attending from the founding also dominated other females who joined later. Interactions among females gradually decreased in frequency after the founding and became milder. The top-dominant rarely left the nest and monopolized most of ovipositions by physically disturbing the subordinates' attempts to oviposit. Differential oophagy was not observed even when the subordinates succeeded in laying (6 cases). After the emergence of workers, the subordinate associates gradually disappeared and the colonies became monogynous (one egg-layer or queen per colony). Monogyny was also confirmed in October on 3 big colonies which had already produced reproductive forms. Eighty-six percent of females (n=50) taken from nests of early stage containing nothing or eggs alone were inseminated and 66% of them had well developed ovaries, while 90% of those (n=20) from more developed nests containing mature larvae and/or pupae were inseminated and only 25% had developed ovaries. This suggests that the ovaries of the subordinates had possibly, though not completely, degenerated through dominance interactions.
- Published
- 1985
60. Social behaviour of an Australian paper wasp,Ropalidia plebeiana, with special reference to the process of acceptance of an alien female
- Author
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Yosiaki Itô
- Subjects
Paper wasp ,Ropalidia plebeiana ,Ecology ,Animal ecology ,Foraging ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Female group ,Alien ,Social behaviour ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography - Abstract
Social interactions amongRopalidia plebeiana females on a nest were observed in Brisbane, Australia. Although a single female (queen-like female) tended to remain on the nest most of the time, and received food most frequently from females which returned from foraging trips, no dominance/aggressive acts were directed by her to regular nestmates. When a possibly alien female tried to join the female group, however, the queen-like female attacked this female strongly. The frequency of these attacks gradually decreased and the newcomer was accepted as a regular member by the eighth day. The attacked female showed a special, possibly ritualized, posture and this seemed to have reduced the frequency of attacks.
- Published
- 1985
61. Social behaviour of a subtropical paper wasp,Ropalidia fasciata (F.): Field observations during founding stage
- Author
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Yosiaki Itô
- Subjects
Paper wasp ,Larva ,Nest ,Ecology ,Animal ecology ,Parasitism ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Subtropics ,Ropalidia fasciata ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Predation - Abstract
Field studies showed that the percentage of foundation by multiple foundresses was remarkably high (34.5%) inRopalidia fasciata in Okinawa. Although one of the foundresses of the association usually remained on the nest and others tended to do extranidal activities, the dominance-subordination relation among cofoundresses seemed to be far milder than that reported inPolistes spp. of Europe and North America. Dominance relation sometimes reversed. All the foundresses could receive a share of food and feed larvae. It was suggested that a large risk of parasitism and predation should favour the trait to join foundress associations inR. fasciata.
- Published
- 1983
62. Social behaviour of the australian paper wasp,Ropalidia revolutionalis (de Saussure) (Hymenoptera: Vespidae)
- Author
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Yosiaki Itô
- Subjects
Paper wasp ,Panama ,animal structures ,biology ,Vespidae ,Ecology ,fungi ,Zoology ,Hymenoptera ,biology.organism_classification ,Ropalidia revolutionalis ,Dominance (ethology) ,Nest ,Animal ecology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Social behaviour ofRopalidia revolutionalis (de Saussure) was observed in Brisbane and Townsville. Nests were, as a rule, founded by association of females. Each nest began as a single comb but, after the emergence of progeny adults, satellite combs were constructed near the original comb. During the pre-emergence (single-comb) stage, each colony had a single egg-layer, despite the rare occurrence of intranidal dominance acts among female wasps. When colonies had reached the multiple-comb stage, the frequency and intensity of intranidal dominance-aggressive acts rose to a high level, comparable to those of typically aggressive colonies of e.g.Polistes canadensis in Panama. Colonies appeared to be still functionally haplometrotic during the early phase of multiple-comb stage, but several potential egg-layers were present as colony size increased. Dominant females often performed wing vibration, rapid runs between combs and tended to sit on the largest comb, whilst subordinate females tended to sit on smaller combs.
- Published
- 1987
63. Influence of insect hormones on the establishment of dominance hierarchies among foundresses of the paper wasp, Polistes gallicus
- Author
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Roger Augier, Ingeborg Röseler, Alain Strambi, and Peter-Frank Röseler
- Subjects
Paper wasp ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Vespidae ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Dominance hierarchy ,Endocrinology ,Animal ecology ,Internal medicine ,Juvenile hormone ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Corpus allatum ,Polistes gallicus ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Hormone - Abstract
Laboratory studies on overwintered foundresses of Polistes gallicus show that differences in the endocrine activity are mainly responsible for achieving the dominance rank. Females that became dominant had either larger corpora allata or more developed ovaries than subordinate females. Body size did not contribute to dominance rank. Since a correlation exists between the length of terminal oocytes and the ecdysteroid titre in haemolymph as well as between the volume of corpora allata and the synthesis of juvenile hormone, dominant behaviour is thought to depend upon an elevated hormone titre in haemolymph. Injections of juvenile hormone (JHI) and 20-hydroxyecdysone, separately and simultaneously, significantly increased the probability that the treated female would be the dominant female of a test pair. After a hierarchy has been established, endocrine activity in subordinate foundresses is inhibited by the dominant foundress that then monopolizes reproduction.
- Published
- 1984
64. Research Techniques in Animal Ecology: Controversies and Consequences. Methods and Cases in Conservation Science. Edited by Luigi Boitani and, Todd K Fuller. New York: Columbia University Press. $32.00 (paper). xxxiii + 442 p; ill.; index. ISBN: 0–231–11340–4 (hc); 0–231–11341–2 (pb). 2000
- Author
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Thomas C Dunstan
- Subjects
Index (economics) ,Animal ecology ,Anthropology ,Columbia university ,Conservation science ,Environmental ethics ,Sociology ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences - Published
- 2002
65. Switching of behavioral option from renesting to nest usurpation after nest loss by the foundress of a paper wasp,Polistes riparius: A field test
- Author
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Shun'ichi Makino
- Subjects
Paper wasp ,Nest ,Ecology ,Animal ecology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biology ,Polistes riparius ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 1989
66. Parental manipulation of offspring size in social groups: a test using paper wasps
- Author
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Christelle Couchoux and Jeremy Field
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Offspring ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Foraging behavior ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Polistes ,media_common ,Paper wasp ,Parental manipulation ,Daughter ,Eusociality ,biology ,05 social sciences ,Body size ,biology.organism_classification ,Aggression ,Animal ecology ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Social animal ,Original Article ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Polistes gallicus ,Demography - Abstract
Maternal effects should be especially likely when mothers actively provision offspring with resources that influence offspring phenotype. In cooperatively breeding and eusocial taxa, there is potential for parents to strategically manipulate offspring phenotype in their own interests. Social insect queens are nearly always larger than their worker offspring, and queens could benefit by producing small daughter workers in several ways. If queens use aggression to dominate or coerce workers, a queen producing small workers might minimize potential conflict or competition from her offspring. In addition, because of the trade-off between the number of workers she is able to produce and their individual size, a queen may produce small workers to optimize colony work effort. In this study, we investigate why queens of the primitively eusocial paper wasp Polistes gallicus limit the size of their workers. We created queen–worker size mismatches by cross-fostering queens between nests. We then tested whether the queen–worker size difference affects worker foraging and reproductive effort, or the amount of aggression in the group. Some of our results were consistent with the idea that queens limit worker size strategically: small workers were no less successful foragers, so that producing a larger number of smaller workers may overall increase queen fitness. We found that queens were less likely to attack large workers, perhaps because attempting to coerce large workers is riskier. However, larger workers did not forage less, did not invest more in ovarian development, and were not more aggressive themselves. There was therefore little evidence overall that queens limit conflict by producing smaller workers. Significance statement In social animals, parents might manipulate phenotypic traits of their offspring in their own interests. In paper wasps (Polistes), the first offspring produced are smaller than the queen and become workers: instead of founding their own nests, they stay and help their mother to rear new queens and males. We investigated whether P. gallicus queens could benefit by producing small daughter workers by using cross-fostering to create size mismatches between queens and their offspring. We then recorded foraging activity, reproductive effort, and aggression on nests. Queens were less likely to attack larger workers, but overall, there was limited evidence of size-based queen–worker conflict. However, because small workers were no less successful foragers, producing a larger number of smaller workers may optimize colony work effort.
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67. Skull shapes and the map, papers of the peabody museum of archaeology and ethnology
- Author
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Eugene Giles
- Subjects
Skull ,Geography ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Animal ecology ,Anthropology ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Archaeology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 1991
68. Model selection using information criteria, but is the “best” model any good?
- Author
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Mac Nally, Ralph, Duncan, Richard P., Thomson, James R., and Yen, Jian D. L.
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ANIMAL ecology ,WILDLIFE management ,ECOLOGY ,NATURAL resources management ,SPECIES distribution - Abstract
Abstract: Information criteria (ICs) are used widely for data summary and model building in ecology, especially in applied ecology and wildlife management. Although ICs are useful for distinguishing among rival candidate models, ICs do not necessarily indicate whether the “best” model (or a model‐averaged version) is a good representation of the data or whether the model has useful “explanatory” or “predictive” ability. As editors and reviewers, we have seen many submissions that did not evaluate whether the nominal “best” model(s) found using IC is a useful model in the above sense. We scrutinized six leading ecological journals for papers that used IC to compare models. More than half of papers using IC for model comparison did not evaluate the adequacy of the best model(s) in either “explaining” or “predicting” the data.
Synthesis and applications . Authors need to evaluate the adequacy of the model identified as the “best” model by using information criteria methods to provide convincing evidence to readers and users that inferences from the best models are useful and reliable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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69. Mating frequency and genetic relatedness of workers in the hornet Vespa analis (Hymenoptera: Vespidae).
- Author
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TAKAHASHI, Jun-ichi, AKIMOTO, Shin’ichi, NAKAMURA, Jun, and HASEGAWA, Eisuke
- Subjects
- *
PAPER wasps , *MICROSATELLITE repeats , *AGRICULTURE , *ANIMAL ecology , *DNA - Abstract
Abstract Mating frequency of Vespa analis queens and the genetic relatedness of their workers was analyzed by DNA microsatellite genotyping. Of 20 colonies studied, 18 had a queen inseminated by a single male and two had queens each inseminated by two males. The estimated effective number of matings was 1.05 ± 0.037 (mean ± SE), with 75–85% of the offspring of the two multiply mated queens sired by a single male. The pedigree relatedness between nestmate workers averaged over the 20 colonies was estimated to be 0.74 ± 0.008, almost identical to the predicted value of 0.75 for colonies headed by a singly mated queen. Multiple matrilines; that is, the presence of workers not related to the current queens, were detected in six colonies, suggesting that queen replacement occurred via usurpation of the founding queens in these six colonies. These results demonstrate that the kin structure of V. analis is similar to that reported in other vespid species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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70. Absence of social facilitation in foraging of workers of the Japanese paper wasp,Polistes chinensis antennalis
- Author
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Eiiti Kasuya
- Subjects
Paper wasp ,Social facilitation ,Polistes chinensis ,biology ,Ecology ,Animal ecology ,Behavioral ecology ,Foraging ,Animal Science and Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 1984
71. Multiple-comb nest foundation by a single inseminated worker of the temperate paper wasp,Polistes snelleni Saussure (Hymenoptera: Vespidae)
- Author
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Masato Ono
- Subjects
Paper wasp ,biology ,Nest ,Vespidae ,Animal ecology ,Ecology ,Temperate climate ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Hymenoptera ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Polistes snelleni - Published
- 1989
72. Foundations of Ecology II : Classic Papers with Commentaries
- Author
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Thomas E. Miller, Joseph Travis, Thomas E. Miller, and Joseph Travis
- Subjects
- Ecology, Plant ecology, Animal ecology
- Abstract
The classic papers that laid the foundations of modern ecology alongside commentaries by noted ecologists. The period of 1970 to 1995 was a time of tremendous change in all areas of ecology—from an increased rigor for experimental design and analysis to the reevaluation of paradigms, new models for understanding, and theoretical advances. Edited by ecologists Thomas E. Miller and Joseph Travis, Foundations of Ecology II includes facsimiles of forty-six papers from this period alongside expert commentaries that discuss a total of fifty-three key studies, addressing topics of diversity, predation, complexity, competition, coexistence, extinction, productivity, resources, distribution, abundance, and conservation. The result is more than a catalog of historic firsts; this book offers diverse perspectives on the foundational papers that led to today's ecological work. Like this book's 1991 predecessor, Foundations of Ecology edited by Leslie A. Real and James H. Brown, Foundations of Ecology II promises to be the essential primer for graduate students and practicing ecologists for decades to come.
- Published
- 2022
73. Social behaviour and social structure of Neotropical paper waspsMischocyttarus angulatus Richards andM. basimacula (Cameron)
- Author
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Yosiaki Itô
- Subjects
Panama ,Ecology ,Aggression ,Social behaviour ,Biology ,Brood ,Biting ,Dominance (ethology) ,Nest ,Animal ecology ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,medicine.symptom ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Social behaviour and social structure of 2 Neotropical polistine wasps,Mischocyttrus angulatus andM. basimacula, were investigated in the Canal Area, Republic of Panama. About 80% ofM. angulatus colonies and a half ofM. basimacula colonies were founted by multiple females having mature eggs in their ovaries. All of single-female colonies examined failed before the emergence of the first progeny. During the pre-emergence period, neither biting nor chasing was observed among females coexisting on the multifemale nests of both species. Although one of the females tended to stay on her nest for most of the time (‘queen-like female’), she was often replaced by a different individual on differrent days. In the post-emergence period, however, frequent aggression among females (including the foundresses and the first brood adults) was observed. The roles of pleometrosis and dominance behaviour in social lives of the 2 species in the wet tropics are discussed.
- Published
- 1984
74. A comparison of nest construction behavior in two species ofPolistes paper wasps (Insecta, Hymenoptera: Vespidae)
- Author
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H. A. Downing and R. L. Jeanne
- Subjects
Polistes fuscatus ,biology ,Vespidae ,fungi ,Hymenoptera ,biology.organism_classification ,Petiole (botany) ,Pupa ,Nest ,Animal ecology ,Botany ,Pulp (tooth) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Polistes fuscatus variatus (a north temperate wasp) andP. instabilis (a tropical wasp) begin building their nests by applying pulp in a linear sequence of steps: surface preparation, petiole, flat sheet, first cell. After the initiation of first cell there are multiple locations for pulp addition (petiole, new cell, old cell), which become increasingly varied inP. fuscatus as the nest grows (secondary petioles, comb back, substrate, and pupal caps). AlthoughP. fuscatus also adds oral secretion to the petiole, comb back, and pupal caps,P. instabilis only applies oral secretion and no pulp to these locations and does not build secondary petioles or place pulp on the substrate. Both species show a similar series of behavioral acts leading from pulp foraging to application. In both species queens initiate more cells than do subordinates; nonetheless, subordinates account for a large percentage of initiated cells. During pre-emergence and early post-emergence the majority of pulp is used for cell lengthening. BothP. instabilis andP. fuscatus show a bimodal pattern of growth in cell number. The numbers of cells in a mature comb at the end of the nesting cycle are similar in both species (P.f.=274.4 andP.i.=282.6 cells).
- Published
- 1987
75. Lobe erection behavior and its possible social role in larvae ofMischocyttarus paper wasps
- Author
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James H. Hunt
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,biology ,Vespidae ,Ecology ,fungi ,Zoology ,Hymenoptera ,biology.organism_classification ,Mischocyttarus ,Animal ecology ,Insect Science ,Polistinae ,Mischocyttarus mexicanus ,Polistes ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Trophallaxis - Abstract
The social wasp genus Mischocyttarus (Vespidae, Polistinae) is exclusively New World and largely tropical in distribution (Richards, 1978). Mischocyttarus species resemble Polistes in both nesting habits and social biology (Jeanne, 1972; Litte, lg7l, 1979, l98l; It6, 1984). Late-instar Mischocyttarus larvae, however, may be distinguished from those of all other wasps by the possession of a one-, two-, or three-pointed lobe on the ventral surface of the first abdominal segment (Fig. 1). The lobes were extensively described from preserved material by Reid (1942). A role in feeding was previously hypothesized for the abdominal lobes of Mischocyttarus larvae (Reid, 1942). S. B. Vinson (personal communication) examined living M. immarginatus larvae and found aspects of the lobe morphology strongly similar to the trophothyllax of pseudomyrmecine ant larvae, which serves to hold a food pellet during ingestion. The lobes are also suggestive of the eversible projections on larvae of some Allodapine bees that apparently serve a feeding function (Michener, 1975). Jeanne (1912), however, determined that the lobes in larval M. drewseni do not serve in feeding. Jeanne (1972, p. 85) was instead the first to observe the behavior of the larvae in response to saliva solicitations of a worker: "Each larva responded either by producing a droplet of secretion, or, apparently if it has none to yield, by retracting into the cell and pulling its abdominal lobes over its head." Observations reported here expand and clarify this brief description, and they suggest a specific, testable adaptative value to larvae for saliva donorism.
- Published
- 1988
76. Consistent oviposition preferences of the Duke of Burgundy butterfly over 14 years on a chalk grassland reserve in Bedfordshire, UK
- Author
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GE Hitchcock, Edgar C. Turner, Colin Lucas, Andrew J. Bladon, M P Hayes, RI Knock, E Ashe-Jepson, Hayes, MP [0000-0001-5200-9259], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
Habitat management ,geography ,Original Paper ,Butterfly ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,biology ,Calcareous grassland ,Oviposition ,Microclimate ,Biodiversity ,biology.organism_classification ,Grassland ,Habitat ,Animal ecology ,Insect Science ,Climate change ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Hamearis lucina ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Abstract The Duke of Burgundy butterfly (Hamearis lucina) is known to have specific habitat requirements for its larval foodplants. However, no studies have yet investigated whether these preferences vary over time or in relation to climate, and there is a paucity of data on whether management on reserves can replicate preferred conditions. Here, we build upon existing research to confirm which characteristics Duke of Burgundy prefer for their larval foodplants, whether preferences remain consistent across years, and whether conservation management on reserves can replicate these conditions. Fieldwork was carried out at Totternhoe Quarry Reserve, a chalk grassland site in Bedfordshire, UK. Confirming previous research, we found that large Primula plants in dense patches were chosen for oviposition, but that once chosen there was no preference to lay eggs on a plant’s largest leaf. Chosen foodplants were also more sheltered and in closer proximity to scrub than their controls. However, at a finer scale, we found little evidence for any preference based on differences in microclimate, or vegetation height immediately surrounding the plants. This suggests features that alter microclimatic conditions at a larger scale are relatively more important for determining the suitability of oviposition sites. Nearly all preferences remained consistent over time and did not vary between years. Management of scrub on the reserve was able to reproduce some preferred habitat features (high plant density), but not others (large plant size). Implications for insect conservation The consistency of findings across years, despite inter-annual variation in temperature, rainfall and number of adults, indicates that the Duke of Burgundy is conservative in its foodplant choice, highlighting its need for specific habitat management. Targeted management for foodplants could form part of a tractable set of tools to support Duke of Burgundy numbers on reserves, but a careful balance is needed to avoid scrub clearance leaving plants in sub-optimal conditions.
- Published
- 2021
77. Cheliceral chelal design in free-living astigmatid mites
- Author
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Bowman, CE
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Ecomorphology ,Mechanical advantage ,Zoology ,Generalist and specialist species ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Size ,Animals ,Body Size ,Pyroglyphid ,Durophagy ,Arthropods ,Ordination ,Acaridae ,Morphometrics ,Mites ,Review Paper ,Geometric morphometrics ,Actinotrichida ,Ecology ,biology ,Feeding ,Shape ,Individualised divergences ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Arthropod mouthparts ,010602 entomology ,Animal ecology ,Insect Science - Abstract
Cheliceral chelal design in free-living astigmatid mites (Arthropoda: Acari) is reviewed within a mechanical model. Trophic access (body size and cheliceral reach) and food morsel handling (chelal gape and estimated static adductive crushing force) are morphologically investigated. Forty-seven commonly occurring astigmatid mite species from 20 genera (covering the Acaridae, Aeroglyphidae, Carpoglyphidae, Chortoglyphidae, Glycyphagidae, Lardoglyphidae, Pyroglyphidae, Suidasiidae, and Winterschmidtiidae) are categorised into functional groups using heuristics. Conclusions are confirmed with statistical tests and multivariate morphometrics. Despite these saprophagous acarines in general being simple ‘shrunken/swollen’ versions of each other, clear statistical correlations in the specifics of their mechanical design (cheliceral and chelal scale and general shape) with the type of habitat and food consumed (their ‘biome’) are found. Using multivariate analyses, macro- and microsaprophagous subtypes are delineated. Relative ratios of sizes on their own are not highly informative of adaptive syndromes. Sympatric resource competition is examined. Evidence for a maximum doubling of approximate body volume within nominal taxa is detected but larger mites are not more ‘generalist’ feeding types. Two contrasting types of basic ‘Bauplan’ are found differing in general scale: (i) a large, chunk-crunching, ‘demolition’-feeding omnivore design (comprising 10 macrosaprophagous astigmatid species), and (ii) a small selective picking, squashing/slicing or fragmentary/‘plankton’ feeding design (which may indicate obligate fungivory/microbivory) comprising 20 microsaprophagous acarid-shaped species. Seventeen other species appear to be specialists. Eleven of these are either: small (interstitial/burrowing) omnivores—or a derived form designed for processing large hard food morsels (debris durophagy, typified by the pyroglyphid Dermatophagoides farinae), or a specialist sub-type of particular surface gleaning/scraping fragmentary feeding. Six possible other minor specialist gleaning/scraping fragmentary feeders types each comprising one to two species are described. Details of these astigmatid trophic-processing functional groups need field validation and more corroborative comparative enzymology. Chelal velocity ratio in itself is not highly predictive of habitat but with cheliceral aspect ratio (or chelal adductive force) is indicative of life-style. Herbivores and pest species are typified by a predicted large chelal adductive force. Pest species may be ‘shredders’ derived from protein-seeking necrophages. Carpoglyphus lactis typifies a mite with tweezer-like chelae of very feeble adductive force. It is suggested that possible zoophagy (hypocarnivory) is associated with low chelal adductive force together with a small or large gape depending upon the size of the nematode being consumed. Kuzinia laevis typifies an oophagous durophage. Functional form is correlated with taxonomic position within the Astigmata—pyroglyphids and glycyphagids being distinct from acarids. A synthesis with mesostigmatid and oribatid feeding types is offered together with clarification of terminologies. The chelal lyrifissure in the daintiest chelicerae of these astigmatids is located similar to where the action of the chelal moveable digit folds the cheliceral shaft in uropodoids, suggesting mechanical similarities of function. Acarid astigmatids are trophically structured like microphytophagous/fragmentary feeding oribatids. Some larger astigmatids (Aleuroglyphus ovatus, Kuzinia laevis, Tyroborus lini) approximate, and Neosuidasia sp. matches, the design of macrophytophagous oribatids. Most astigmatid species reviewed appear to be positioned with other oribatid secondary decomposers. Only Dermatophagoides microceras might be a primary decomposer approximating a lichenivorous oribatid (Austrachipteria sp.) in trophic form. Astigmatid differences are consilient with the morphological trend from micro- to macrophytophagy in oribatids. The key competency in these actinotrichid mites is a type of ‘gnathosomisation’ through increased chelal and cheliceral height (i.e., a shape change that adjusts the chelal input effort arm and input adductive force) unrestricted by the dorsal constraint of a mesostigmatid-like gnathotectum. A predictive nomogram for ecologists to use on field samples is included. Future work is proposed in detail.
- Published
- 2021
78. The potential for parasite spill-back from commercial bumblebee colonies: a neglected threat to wild bees?
- Author
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Callum D. Martin, Michelle T. Fountain, and Mark J. F. Brown
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Pollination ,media_common.quotation_subject ,ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species ,Zoology ,Insect ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Crop ,03 medical and health sciences ,Parasite hosting ,Strawberry crop ,Wild bee conservation ,Bumblebee ,030304 developmental biology ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,media_common ,0303 health sciences ,Original Paper ,Parasite spill-over ,Ecology ,biology ,ved/biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Animal ecology ,Insect Science ,Bombus terrestris ,Apicystis bombi ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Commercial bumblebee management - Abstract
Commercially-reared bumblebee colonies provide pollination services to numerous crop species globally. These colonies may harbour parasites which can spill-over to wild bee species. However, the potential for parasites to spread from wild to commercial bumblebees, which could then lead to parasite spill-back, is poorly understood. To investigate this, parasite-free commercial Bombus terrestris audax colonies, which are used commercially for strawberry pollination, were placed into seasonal strawberry crops for either 6- or 8-week blocks across two key time periods, early spring and early summer. Bumblebees were removed from colonies weekly and screened for the presence of parasites. In the early spring placement, only one parasite, the highly virulent neogregarine Apicystis bombi, was detected at a low prevalence (0.46% across all bees screened). In contrast, all colonies placed in the crop in the early summer became infected. A trypanosome, Crithidia bombi, and A. bombi were the most prevalent parasites across all samples, reaching peak prevalence in screened bees of 39.39% and 18.18% respectively at the end of the experimental period. The prevalence of A. bombi was greater than most UK records from wild bumblebees, suggesting that commercial colonies could enhance levels of A. bombi infection in wild bees through spill-back. Studies on larger geographical scales with different commercial colony densities are required to fully assess spill-back risk. However, seasonal management, to minimise spill-back opportunities, and treatment of commercial colonies to prevent infection, could be implemented to manage the potential risks of parasite spill-back to wild bees.Implications for insect conservation Our results show that commercial bumblebee populations do pick up infections, most likely from wild bees, and that these infections can reach prevalences where they may pose a threat to wild bees via parasite spill-back. More research is required to clarify the extent of this potential threat.
- Published
- 2021
79. Evolution of MHC class I genes in Japanese and Russian raccoon dogs, Nyctereutes procyonoides (Carnivora: Canidae)
- Author
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Alexei V. Abramov, Aye Mee F Bartocillo, Ryuichi Masuda, and Yoshinori Nishita
- Subjects
Original Paper ,MHC Class I Protein ,biology ,MHC Class I Gene ,Major histocompatibility complex ,Raccoon Dogs ,Balancing selection ,biology.organism_classification ,Positive selection ,Evolutionary biology ,Animal ecology ,MHC class I ,biology.protein ,Animal Science and Zoology ,MHC class I diversity ,Adaptation ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nyctereutes procyonoides - Abstract
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes have been widely studied to assess the immunological fitness and evolutionary adaptation of animal populations. Among the Canidae, the raccoon dog’s adventurous nature, omnivorous behavior, and high variability of intracellular pathogens make it ideal to study selection on MHC class I in a non-model canid species. Here, we examined allelic diversity and evolutionary patterns of MHC class I genes in the raccoon dog (Nyctereutes procyonoides). We identified 48 novel MHC class I alleles from 31 raccoon dogs from Japan and Russia. Some alleles were geographically restricted, whereas others were widely distributed across the species’ range. The rate of non-synonymous substitutions was greater than that of synonymous substitutions for both exon 2 and exon 3 encoding α1 and α2 domains, respectively, in the α chain of the MHC class I protein. Positively selected sites at the amino acid level were evident in both the α1 and α2 domains, and a recombination breakpoint was found in exon 3. Bayesian phylogenetic trees showed no evidence of trans-species polymorphism (TSP) with alleles from carnivoran species in other families but did detect TSP between raccoon dogs and the domestic dog, Canis familiaris, indicative of long-term balancing selection in canids. Our results indicate that the extensive allelic diversity of MHC class I in Japanese and Russian raccoon dogs has been influenced and maintained by pathogen-driven positive selection, recombination, and long-term balancing selection. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s13364-021-00561-y.
- Published
- 2021
80. Journal of Animal Ecology: Instructions for Authors.
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REPORT writing ,AUTHORSHIP ,PERIODICAL publishing ,ONLINE data processing ,ELECTRONIC data processing ,ANIMAL ecology ,ECOLOGY ,BIOLOGY ,PERIODICALS - Abstract
Journal of Animal Ecology now only accepts submissions online. When your manuscript has been prepared in accordance with the following instructions, please access the online submission site at You must select the Journal of Animal Ecology when you log on. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
81. Synthesis of special feature —Tailored Restoration Response: Predictions And Guidelines For Wetland Renewal.
- Author
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Waryszak, Pawel and Asbridge, Emma
- Subjects
- *
ANIMAL ecology , *RESTORATION ecology , *PLANT ecology , *SOIL science , *ECOLOGICAL models , *WETLANDS - Abstract
Growing understanding of decision‐making and environmental science is essential to carry out a successful wetland renewal. To foster this understanding and integrate knowledge on wetland renewal, we convened a diverse group of researchers, policymakers, and practitioners at an online symposium held on 23 November 2021. Following the symposium, we curated 22 papers from a global community of wetland experts for the special feature on "Wetland Renewal" in Restoration Ecology. This special feature encompasses findings from 15 field‐based experiments and 7 data‐based papers (P). The research spans various scientific fields such as: Biodiversity Conservation (P15), Coastal Engineering (P4, P8, and P9), Plant Ecology (P1, P2, P10, P12, and P13), Invasion Ecology (P7), Social Science (P3), Peat Soil Science (P6), Wildlife Ecology (P5, P11, and P22), Ecological Modeling (P16, P17, P18, P19, and P20), Microbiology (P22), and Policy and Law (P21). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
82. Resolution of Respect
- Published
- 2006
83. Human-wildlife Interactions and Community Livelihoods: The Case of Villages Around the Selous Game Reserve, Morogoro District, Tanzania.
- Author
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Swalehe, Twahir Hussein and Yanda, Pius Zebhe
- Subjects
LAND cover ,NATURAL resources ,ANIMAL ecology ,LAND use ,DEVELOPING countries ,HUMAN-animal relationships - Abstract
In developing nations, particularly in Africa, interactions between humans and animals (HWIs) are widespread as local populations heavily rely on natural resources such as forests, which serve as habitats for flora and fauna. This paper draws from a study which investigated human-wildlife interactions (HWIs) in four villages--Mvuha, Mbwade, Milengwelengwe, and Kisaki Gomero-- surrounding the Selous Game Reserve (SGR). A mixed methods approach was adopted to aid data capturing from 312 households and 11 key informants. Spatial analysis was employed to depict land use and land cover changes around the SGR over time due to human influence. The results indicated that HWIs were influenced by changes in water and pasture availability caused by two elements of weather: temperature and rainfall. People in WMA-designated villages complained about the lack of employment and unfair distribution of benefits, whereby the main concern of non-WMA-designated villages was on the need for policy review, with emphasis on the holistic conservation approach. Nonetheless, bush lands have increased in recent decades at the expense of woodland due to the proliferation of human interference. The paper concludes that the intersection of community livelihoods and wildlife ecology was the most common HWI pattern observed. However, typical forms of interaction were often hostile and instigated human-wildlife conflicts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
84. Multi-scale habitat selection modeling: a review and outlook.
- Author
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McGarigal, Kevin, Wan, Ho, Zeller, Kathy, Timm, Brad, and Cushman, Samuel
- Subjects
HABITATS ,HABITAT selection ,LANDSCAPE ecology ,ANIMAL ecology ,MULTISCALE modeling - Abstract
Context: Scale is the lens that focuses ecological relationships. Organisms select habitat at multiple hierarchical levels and at different spatial and/or temporal scales within each level. Failure to properly address scale dependence can result in incorrect inferences in multi-scale habitat selection modeling studies. Objectives: Our goals in this review are to describe the conceptual origins of multi-scale habitat selection modeling, evaluate the current state-of-the-science, and suggest ways forward to improve analysis of scale-dependent habitat selection. Methods: We reviewed more than 800 papers on habitat selection from 23 major ecological journals published between 2009 and 2014 and recorded a number of characteristics, such as whether they addressed habitat selection at multiple scales, what attributes of scale were evaluated, and what analytical methods were utilized. Results: Our results show that despite widespread recognition of the importance of multi-scale analyses of habitat relationships, a large majority of published habitat ecology papers do not address multiple spatial or temporal scales. We also found that scale optimization, which is critical to assess scale dependence, is done in less than 5 % of all habitat selection modeling papers and less than 25 % of papers that address 'multi-scale' habitat analysis broadly defined. Conclusions: Our review confirms the existence of a powerful conceptual foundation for multi-scale habitat selection modeling, but that the majority of studies on wildlife habitat are still not adopting multi-scale frameworks. Most importantly, our review points to the need for wider adoption of a formal scale optimization of organism response to environmental variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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85. Individual variation in queen morphology and behavior predicts colony performance in the wild
- Author
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Elizabeth A. Tibbetts, Colin M. Wright, Jonathan N. Pruitt, and James L. L. Lichtenstein
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Paper wasp ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,05 social sciences ,Maternal effect ,Zoology ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Social group ,Polistes metricus ,Animal ecology ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Personality ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Temperament ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common ,Field conditions - Abstract
The founders of a social group or colony have the potential to greatly influence the success or failure of the societies that they initiate. Whether through their genetic contribution, or through behavioral maternal effects related to temperament, resource acquisition, or brood care, the traits of founders deserve special consideration. The queens of many social insects are ideally suited to address questions relating to the importance of founder traits due to her solitary involvement in performing a multitude of tasks necessary to produce a functioning colony. While it has been suggested that a queen’s behavioral phenotype might contribute to differences in colony success, no study has yet demonstrated these links in situ. Here, we use the singly founding (haplometrotic) paper wasp Polistes metricus to examine whether queen personality, measured shortly after colony founding (pre-emergent phase), and morphology, can predict colony size (a proxy for queen fitness) and parasite load in the wild. We found that larger and bolder queens gave rise to larger colonies than smaller and shyer queens, and there was no relationship between queen personality and parasite load. Differences in queen traits therefore appear to be a major determinant of colony success under field conditions. In social species, the personality composition of groups has been shown to be a large determinant of group behavior, which in turn can determine group performance and survival. In this study, we explore the degree to which the behavioral tendencies of key group members—wasp queens—influence the performance of their descendant societies. We tested the behavioral tendencies and morphology of Polistes metricus paper wasp queens in the early spring, placed them back in the field in nest boxes, and recorded each nest’s cell count at the end of the season—a reliable proxy for queen fitness. We found that larger and bolder queens gave rise to larger descendant colonies on average than their smaller, shyer counterparts. Individual variation in queen traits therefore appears to be a determinant of colony success under field conditions.
- Published
- 2019
86. Fast and slow advances toward a deeper integration of theory and empiricism.
- Author
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Abbott, Karen C., Ji, Fang, Stieha, Christopher R., and Moore, Christopher M.
- Subjects
SPRUCE budworm ,INSECT ecology ,EMPIRICISM ,ANIMAL ecology ,INSECTS ,QUALITATIVE chemical analysis ,ECOLOGICAL regime shifts - Abstract
In this article, we present a modern commentary on Ludwig, Jones, and Holling's classic paper, "Qualitative analysis of insect outbreak systems: the spruce budworm and forest," published in the Journal of Animal Ecology in 1978. In contrast to papers that become classics for advancing one big idea, Ludwig et al.'s contribution is striking for its breadth of impact. It has become a foundational reference in areas as disparate as insect ecology and management, alternative stable states, the effects of natural enemies, and the separation of time scales between fast- and slow-changing variables. Interestingly, the paper is not generally remembered as an attempt to bridge the divide between theoretical and empirical ecologists, as we will show, even though this is how the authors motivated their work. In this commentary, we examine the expected and unexpected ways Ludwig et al. (J Anim Ecol 47:315–332, 1978) have found a place in modern ecological thought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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87. Coupled human and natural systems: The evolution and applications of an integrated framework: This article belongs to Ambio's 50th Anniversary Collection. Theme: Anthropocene.
- Author
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Liu, Jianguo, Dietz, Thomas, Carpenter, Stephen R., Taylor, William W., Alberti, Marina, Deadman, Peter, Redman, Charles, Pell, Alice, Folke, Carl, Ouyang, Zhiyun, and Lubchenco, Jane
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,BIODIVERSITY ,ENDANGERED species listing ,ANIMAL ecology - Abstract
The paper also catalyzed the establishment of the "International Network of Research on Coupled Human and Natural Systems" (CHANS-Net) to promote and facilitate communications and collaborations between a diverse community of CHANS scholars. The CHANS paper was preceded by the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment[1] and crystallization of sustainability science and resilience concepts, for example, and the CHANS paper brought these ideas together and helped link these communities. CHANS-Net has also supported many young scholars (e.g., CHANS Fellows) from all over the globe to attend, present, network, collaborate, and learn from senior scholars at the various events. All three concepts are often used interchangeably, although formally the latter two are subsets of CHANS because CHANS includes not only social dimensions but also many other human dimensions (e.g., economic, cultural) that are not emphasized in the term of "social-ecological systems". [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
88. Feeding design in free-living mesostigmatid chelicerae (Acari: Anactinotrichida)
- Author
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Clive E. Bowman
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Functional morphological form ,010607 zoology ,Zoology ,Rollplatte ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,Predation ,Saprophagy ,Animals ,Body Size ,Heuristics ,Chela ,Durophagy ,Acari ,Arthropods ,Review Paper ,Ecology ,Feeding Behavior ,General Medicine ,Airoryhnchy versus klinorhynchy ,Arthropod mouthparts ,Stochastic prediction ,010602 entomology ,Biomechanical adaptation ,Animal ecology ,Predatory Behavior ,Insect Science ,Ambush predator ,Allometry ,Carnivore ecomorphology - Abstract
A model based upon mechanics is used in a re-analysis of historical acarine morphological work augmented by an extra seven zoophagous mesostigmatid species. This review shows that predatory mesostigmatids do have cheliceral designs with clear rational purposes. Almost invariably within an overall body size class, the switch in predatory style from a worm-like prey feeding (‘crushing/mashing’ kill) functional group to a micro-arthropod feeding (‘active prey cutting/slicing/slashing' kill) functional group is matched by: an increased cheliceral reach, a bigger chelal gape, a larger morphologically estimated chelal crunch force, and a drop in the adductive lever arm velocity ratio of the chela. Small size matters. Several uropodines (Eviphis ostrinus, the omnivore Trachytes aegrota, Urodiaspis tecta and, Uropoda orbicularis) have more elongate chelicerae (greater reach) than their chelal gape would suggest, even allowing for allometry across mesostigmatids. They may be: plesiosaur-like high-speed strikers of prey, scavenging carrion feeders (like long-necked vultures), probing/burrowing crevice feeders of cryptic nematodes, or small morsel/fragmentary food feeders. Some uropodoids have chelicerae and chelae which probably work like a construction-site mechanical excavator-digger with its small bucket. Possible hoeing/bulldozing, spore-cracking and tiny sabre-tooth cat-like striking actions are discussed for others. Subtle changes lead small mesostigmatids to be predator–scavengers (mesocarnivores) or to be predator–fungivores (hypocarnivores). Some uropodines (e.g., the worm-like prey feeder Alliphis siculus and, Uropoda orbicularis) show chelae similar in design to astigmatids and cryptostigmatids indicating possible facultative saprophagy. Scale matters—obligate predatory designs (hypercarnivory) start for mesostigmatids with chelal gape > 150 μm and cheliceral reach > 350 μm (i.e., about 500–650 μm in body size). Commonality of trophic design in these larger species with solifugids is indicated. Veigaia species with low chelal velocity ratio and other morphological strengthening specialisms, appear specially adapted in a concerted way for predating active soft and fast moving springtails (Collembola). Veigaia cerva shows a markedly bigger chelal gape than its cheliceral reach would proportionately infer suggesting it is a crocodile-like sit-and-wait or ambush predator par excellence. A small chelal gape, low cheliceral reach, moderate velocity ratio variant of the worm-like feeding habit design is supported for phytoseiid pollenophagy. Evidence for a resource partitioning model in the evolution of gnathosomal development is found. A comparison to crustacean claws and vertebrate mandibles is made. Alliphis siculus and Rhodacarus strenzkei are surprisingly powerful mega-cephalics for their small size. Parasitids show a canid-like trophic design. The chelicera of the nematophagous Alliphis halleri shows felid-like features. Glyphtholaspis confusa has hyaena-like cheliceral dentition. The latter species has a markedly smaller chelal gape than its cheliceral reach would suggest proportionately, which together with a high chelal velocity ratio and a high estimated chelal crunch force matches a power specialism of feeding on immobile tough fly eggs/pupae by crushing (durophagy). A consideration of gnathosomal orientation is made. Predatory specialisms appear to often match genera especially in larger mesostigmatids, which may scale quite differently. Comparison to holothyrids and opilioacarids indicates that the cheliceral chelae of the former are cutting-style and those of the latter are crushing-style. A simple validated easy-to-use ‘2:1 on’ predictive algorithm of feeding habit type is included based on a strength-speed tradeoff in chelal velocity ratio for ecologists to test in the field.
- Published
- 2021
89. Multi-Scale Habitat Selection by the Wintering Whooper Swan (Cygnus cygnus) in Manas National Wetland Park, Northwestern China.
- Author
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Yan, Han, Ma, Xuejun, Yang, Weikang, and Xu, Feng
- Subjects
HABITAT selection ,WATER birds ,SWANS ,NATIONAL parks & reserves ,ANIMAL ecology ,ARTIFICIAL satellite tracking ,HABITAT conservation - Abstract
Habitat selection has been a central focus of animal ecology, with research primarily concentrating on habitat choice, utilization, and evaluation. However, studies confined to a single scale often fail to reveal the habitat selection needs of animals fully and accurately. This paper investigates the wintering whooper swan (Cygnus cygnus) in Manas National Wetland Park, Xinjiang, using satellite tracking to determine their locations. The Maximum Entropy model (MaxEnt) was applied to explore the multi-scales habitat selection needs of Manas National Wetland Park's wintering whooper swans across nighttime, daytime, and landscape scales. This study showed that the habitat selection of the wintering whooper swans varied in different scales. At the landscape scale, wintering whooper swans prefer habitats with average winter precipitations of 6.9 mm and average temperatures of −6 °C, including water bodies and wetlands, indicating that climate (precipitation and temperature) and land type (wetlands and water bodies) influence their winter habitat selection. During daytime, whooper swans prefer areas close to wetlands, water bodies, and bare land, with a more dispersed distribution of water bodies. For nighttime, they tend to choose areas within the wetland park where human disturbance is minimal and safety is higher. This study can provide scientific basis and data support for habitat conservation and management of wintering waterbirds like whooper swans, recommending targeted conservation measures to effectively manage and protect the wintering grounds of whooper swans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
90. Studying animal locomotion with multiple data loggers: quantifying time drift between tags.
- Author
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White, Connor F. and Lauder, George V.
- Subjects
DATA loggers ,DISPLAY behavior in animals ,ANIMAL mechanics ,ANIMAL ecology ,ANIMAL experimentation ,ANIMAL tagging ,ANIMAL locomotion - Abstract
Temporal accuracy is a fundamental characteristic of logging technology and is needed to correlate data streams. Single biologgers sensing animal movement (accelerometers, gyroscope, magnetometers, collectively inertial measurement unit; IMU) have been extensively used to study the ecology of animals. To better capture whole body movement and increase the accuracy of behavior classification, there is a need to deploy multiple loggers on a single individual to capture the movement of multiple body parts. Yet due to temporal drift, accurately aligning multiple IMU datasets can be problematic, especially as deployment duration increases. In this paper we quantify temporal drift and errors in commercially available IMU data loggers using a combination of robotic and animal borne experiments. The variance in drift rate within a tag is over an order of magnitude lower (σ = 0.001 s h
−1 ) than the variance between tags (σ = 0.015 s·h−1 ), showing that recording frequency is a characteristic of each tag and not a random variable. Furthermore, we observed a large offset (0.54 ± 0.016 s·h−1 ) between two groups of tags that had differing recording frequencies, and we observed three instances of instantaneous temporal jumps within datasets introducing errors into the data streams. Finally, we show that relative drift rates can be estimated even when deployed on animals displaying various behaviors without the tags needing to be simultaneously moved. For the tags used in this study, drift rates can vary significantly between tags, are repeatable, and can be accurately measured in the field. The temporal alignment of multiple tag datasets allows researchers to deploy multiple tags on an individual animal which will greatly increase our knowledge of movement kinematics and expand the range of movement characteristics that can be used for behavioral classification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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91. Increasing prevalence of severe fires change the structure of arthropod communities: Evidence from a meta‐analysis.
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Bieber, Blyssalyn V., Vyas, Dhaval K., Koltz, Amanda M., Burkle, Laura A., Bey, Kiaryce S., Guzinski, Claire, Murphy, Shannon M., and Vidal, Mayra C.
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COMMUNITIES ,ECOLOGICAL disturbances ,ANIMAL communities ,ANIMAL ecology ,FIRE ecology ,BIOLOGICAL evolution ,ECOSYSTEMS - Abstract
Animal ecology and evolution are shaped by environmental perturbations, which are undergoing unprecedented alterations due to climate change. Fire is one such perturbation that causes significant disruption by causing mortality and altering habitats and resources for animals. Fire regimes are changing on a global scale, but the effects of these changes on animal communities are poorly understood. Arthropods are one of the most ubiquitous and diverse animal taxa on the planet and their populations are sensitive to environmental change. Given their wide‐ranging impacts on ecosystem functioning, a better understanding of arthropod responses to changing fire regimes is critical and may also provide more general insights into how other groups might respond to fire.Here, we provide a comprehensive meta‐analytical assessment of how fire influences the arthropod community across habitats and functional groups. Using data from 130 peer‐reviewed papers across the globe, we tested how a variety of fire characteristics, including management regime, severity and time‐since‐fire affect arthropod populations and communities across habitats.Our results show that arthropod communities display substantial variation in response to fire and that community‐level responses are most likely to be detected within the first year. Responses also vary depending on fire characteristics and habitat. Specifically, while community metrics such as diversity were increased by low severity fires, they were reduced by high severity fires. Likewise, evenness increased after prescribed burns but was reduced after wildfire. Measures of arthropod community structure decreased following fires in deserts and forests.Across the entire arthropod community, fire also had variable effects on community diversity. Fire tended to have a negative effect size on arthropods across life stages, but responses did vary among groups. Nearly all functional groups exhibited a negative response to fire with the exception of herbivores, for which abundance, diversity and richness increased after fire.Our results suggest that the increasing prevalence of high‐severity wildfires are changing the structure of arthropod communities. Given their ubiquitous presence and diverse roles in terrestrial ecosystems, these community changes are likely to affect ecosystem functioning in various ways, including through increased herbivory. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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92. Towards complex applications of active remote sensing for ecology and conservation.
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Latifi, Hooman, Valbuena, Ruben, and Silva, Carlos Alberto
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REMOTE sensing ,ANIMAL populations ,OPTICAL radar ,LIDAR ,WILDLIFE monitoring ,ANIMAL ecology ,APPLIED ecology - Abstract
Remote sensing (RS) and geospatial sciences already amount to a long history of fostering research in topics related to ecology. Data and methods have mainly been subject to research and experiments, but trends are now emerging that suggest the use of RS in practical applications like nationwide monitoring programs and assisting global conservation goals. However, use of active remote sensing for ecological and conservation is in its infancy, and the implications of active sensor data, including light detection and ranging and radio detection and ranging that mostly deliver three‐dimensional (3D) information, are still relatively primitive and have largely been limited to indirect use of their extracted proxies for ecological modelling.This cross‐journal special feature between Methods in Ecology and Evolution, Journal of Animal Ecology, Journal of Applied Ecology and Journal of Ecology includes 18 papers that include full research papers, reviews and technical applications. They are mostly novel in either or both their interpretation of proxies derived from active RS data and the direct usage of 3D RS techniques (terrestrial, airborne, UAV borne and spaceborne) to address ecological topics.We categorized the published contributions into the following thematic groups, with some degree of overlap: (i) ecosystem structural analysis by active data (nine studies); (ii) response of animal populations to climate dynamics as shown by active data; (iii) interactive effects of forest structure and wildlife monitoring (five studies); (iv) forest inventories assisted by active data (one study) and (v) tree type classification by active data (one study).Synthesis. The studies in this Special Feature and trends shown by other recent works at the interface of ecology and active RS confirm the ongoing shift from indirect and solely proxy‐based approaches to direct and more data‐science driven methods in approaching ecology and conservation problems by means of active sensors. Relatively affordable and accessible drone and citizen science‐based on‐demand active RS data acquisition are becoming common practice, and the future of sensor development is hypothesized to go beyond the current domination of very high spatial resolution data and towards multiple spaceborne platforms. These tools and methods will support spatial upscaling, uncertainty analysis, large‐scale mapping and monitoring of wildlife dynamics, among other topics that can take advantage of multitemporal/time series data. Nevertheless, access to demanding and costly very high‐resolution data sources may still be maintained and optimized by establishing international and public–private partnered data pools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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93. The Prehistoric Animal Ecology and Ethnozoology of the Upper Great Lakes Region. Charles Edward Cleland. Anthropological Papers, Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, No. 29. Ann Arbor, 1966. 304 pp., illus. Paper, $3
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David A. Baerreis
- Subjects
Prehistory ,Ethnozoology ,Multidisciplinary ,History ,Anthropology ,Animal ecology - Published
- 1967
94. Getting cited early: influence of visibility strategies, structure, and focal system on early citation rates.
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Gelzer, Emily R., Laforge, Michel P., Becker, Justine A., Hough, Nathan P., Lambert, Mallory Sandoval, Poulin, Marie‐Pier, Thomas‐Kuzilik, Rebecca, Verzuh, Tana L., and Merkle, Jerod A.
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ANIMAL ecology ,WILDLIFE management ,MANAGEMENT science ,PERIODICAL publishing ,PERIODICAL articles ,ANIMAL populations - Abstract
Elucidating factors that contribute to citation rates of scientific articles can help scientists write manuscripts that have a stronger influence on their scientific field and are accessible to a broad audience. Using a cohort of 778 articles published in The Journal of Wildlife Management from 2011–2015, we examined how visibility strategies, article structure, and focal system (all factors authors can predominantly control) influenced the accumulation of citations over various time frames within the first 5 years after publication, and the number of days until an article received its first citation. Visibility strategies (e.g., open access, increasing the Altmetric Attention Score, and self‐citations) all influenced the number of citations accrued following publication. Citations were more stochastic 1 year following publication compared to 5 years following publication, with only 20.1% of papers receiving a citation after 1 year compared to 92.5% of papers receiving a citation after 5 years. Our model explained much more of the variation after 5 years compared to after only 1 year (R2 = 0.57 and 0.12, respectively). The number of factors significantly associated with citation rates increased as the timeframe of our analysis increased. After 5 years, factors associated with article structure (e.g., number of references), focal system (e.g., methods papers), and visibility all increased citation counts of papers. Our work suggests citation rates within wildlife ecology are influenced by a number of controllable factors, and that authors pursuing a variety of visibility strategies can increase the influence of an article on science and management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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95. An introduction to niche construction theory
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Kevin N. Laland, Marcus W. Feldman, Blake Matthews, European Research Council, University of St Andrews. School of Biology, University of St Andrews. Scottish Oceans Institute, University of St Andrews. Institute of Behavioural and Neural Sciences, University of St Andrews. Centre for Social Learning & Cognitive Evolution, and University of St Andrews. Centre for Biological Diversity
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0301 basic medicine ,Niche construction theory ,Modern evolutionary synthesis ,QH301 Biology ,Ecology (disciplines) ,GF Human ecology. Anthropogeography ,Biology ,Ecological inheritance ,QH301 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Empirical research ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Original Paper ,Ecology ,Inheritance (genetic algorithm) ,GF ,Epistemology ,ComputingMilieux_GENERAL ,Niche construction ,Cultural niche construction ,030104 developmental biology ,Animal ecology ,Evolutionary ecology ,Ecosystem engineering - Abstract
Niche construction refers to the modification of selective environments by organisms. Theoretical and empirical studies of niche construction are increasing in importance as foci in evolutionary ecology. This special edition presents theoretical and empirical research that illustrates the significance of niche construction to the field. Here we set the scene for the following papers by (1) discussing the history of niche construction research, (2) providing clear definitions that distinguish niche construction from related concepts such as ecosystem engineering and the extended phenotype, (3) providing a brief summary of the findings of niche construction research, (4) discussing the contribution of niche construction and ecological inheritance to (a) expanded notions of inheritance, and (b) the extended evolutionary synthesis, and (5) briefly touching on some of the issues that underlie the controversies over niche construction. Publisher PDF
- Published
- 2016
96. Co‐infections mask pathogen‐specific associations with the gut microbiota in wild voles.
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Schmid, Dominik W. and Risely, Alice
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GUT microbiome ,VOLES ,MIXED infections ,ANIMAL ecology ,MICROBIAL communities - Abstract
Research Highlight: Brila, I., Lavirinienko, A., Tukalenko, E., Kallio, E. R., Mappes, T. & Watts, P. C. (2022). Idiosyncratic effects of coinfection on the association between systemic pathogens and the gut microbiota of a wild rodent, the bank vole (Myodes glareolus). Journal of Animal Ecology, https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365‐2656.13869. Interactions between pathogens and host‐associated microbial communities can influence host fitness, disease progression and pathogen emergence. The vast majority of studies characterize interactions between single pathogens and bacterial commensals, yet co‐infections with multiple pathogens are the norm in nature. In their paper on pathogen–microbiome interactions, Brila et al. (2022) examine how co‐infections with four systemic pathogens associate with the gut microbiota in wild bank voles. Building on a series of tests, the authors show that excluding co‐infection information from statistical models masks pathogen‐specific patterns and confounds interpretations. This paper advances on previous studies by generating surveillance data on a phylogenetically diverse suite of vole pathogens to address the question as to whether pathogens exhibit unique or universal associations with gut commensals. They report that even bacterial pathogens with similar transmission ecology have divergent associations with gut microbes, and highlight that a mechanistic understanding of host–pathogen interactions is necessary for decoding the diverse consequences for gut microbial communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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97. Implications of clonality for ageing research
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Roberto Salguero-Gómez
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Senescence ,CLO-PLA database ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Fertility ,Life history strategy ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Life history theory ,Clonal reproduction ,Population ecology ,Begging ,Sexual reproduction ,Ramet ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Population matrix model ,Phylogenetic analyses ,media_common ,Demography ,2. Zero hunger ,Original Paper ,Ecology ,Repertoire ,Fast-slow continuum ,Genet ,Animal ecology ,Life history trait ,Dormancy ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Senescence, an organismal performance decline with age, has historically been considered a universal phenomenon by evolutionary biologists and zoologist. Yet, increasing fertility and survival with age are nothing new to plant ecologists, among whom it is common knowledge that senescence is not universal. Recently, these two realities have come into a confrontation, begging for the rephrasing of the classical question that has led ageing research for decades: “why do we senesce?” to a more practical “what are the mechanisms by which some organisms escape from senescence?” Plants are amenable to examining this question because of their rich repertoire of life history strategies. These include the existence of permanent seed banks, vegetative dormancy and ability to produce clones, among others. Here, I use a large number of high resolution demographic models from 181 species that reflect life history strategies and their trade-offs among herbaceous perennials, succulents and shrubs measured under field conditions worldwide to examine whether senescence rates of ramets from clonal plants differ from those of whole plants reproducing either strictly sexually, or with a combination of sexual and clonal mechanisms. Contrary to the initial expectation from the mutation accumulation theory of senescence, ramets of clonal plants were more likely to exhibit senescence than those species employing sexual reproduction. I discuss why these comparisons between ramets and genets are useful, as well as its implications and future directions for ageing research. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1007/s10682-017-9923-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2017
98. Detecting signals of chronic shedding to explain pathogen persistence: <scp>L</scp> eptospira interrogans in <scp>C</scp> alifornia sea lions
- Author
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Robert L. DeLong, James O. Lloyd-Smith, Jeffrey L. Laake, Denise J. Greig, Michael G. Buhnerkempe, Sharon R. Melin, Christopher C. Strelioff, Katherine C. Prager, and Frances M. D. Gulland
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Standard Paper ,030106 microbiology ,Population ,Wildlife disease ,epidemic drivers ,California ,partially observed Markov process ,Disease Outbreaks ,subclinical shedding ,03 medical and health sciences ,critical community size ,Prevalence ,Animals ,Leptospirosis ,pathogen reservoir ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,asymptomatic infection ,education.field_of_study ,seasonal transmission ,biology ,Ecology ,Transmission (medicine) ,Incidence ,birth pulse ,Outbreak ,Models, Theoretical ,Parasite and Disease Ecology ,biology.organism_classification ,Sea Lions ,Virus Shedding ,030104 developmental biology ,Animal ecology ,Female ,maintenance host ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Seasons ,Critical community size ,Leptospira interrogans ,Leptospira interrogans serovar pomona ,marine mammal stranding - Abstract
Summary Identifying mechanisms driving pathogen persistence is a vital component of wildlife disease ecology and control. Asymptomatic, chronically infected individuals are an oft‐cited potential reservoir of infection, but demonstrations of the importance of chronic shedding to pathogen persistence at the population‐level remain scarce.Studying chronic shedding using commonly collected disease data is hampered by numerous challenges, including short‐term surveillance that focuses on single epidemics and acutely ill individuals, the subtle dynamical influence of chronic shedding relative to more obvious epidemic drivers, and poor ability to differentiate between the effects of population prevalence of chronic shedding vs. intensity and duration of chronic shedding in individuals.We use chronic shedding of Leptospira interrogans serovar Pomona in California sea lions (Zalophus californianus) as a case study to illustrate how these challenges can be addressed. Using leptospirosis‐induced strands as a measure of disease incidence, we fit models with and without chronic shedding, and with different seasonal drivers, to determine the time‐scale over which chronic shedding is detectable and the interactions between chronic shedding and seasonal drivers needed to explain persistence and outbreak patterns.Chronic shedding can enable persistence of L. interrogans within the sea lion population. However, the importance of chronic shedding was only apparent when surveillance data included at least two outbreaks and the intervening inter‐epidemic trough during which fadeout of transmission was most likely. Seasonal transmission, as opposed to seasonal recruitment of susceptibles, was the dominant driver of seasonality in this system, and both seasonal factors had limited impact on long‐term pathogen persistence.We show that the temporal extent of surveillance data can have a dramatic impact on inferences about population processes, where the failure to identify both short‐ and long‐term ecological drivers can have cascading impacts on understanding higher order ecological phenomena, such as pathogen persistence., Chronic shedding of a pathogen by individuals is an oft‐cited but poorly understood mechanism for pathogen persistence due to difficulties in observing chronic shedders in many disease surveillance programmes. The authors show that the effect of chronic shedding is quantifiable when accounting for surveillance duration and interactions with short‐term epidemic drivers.
- Published
- 2017
99. CpG-creating Mutations are Costly in Many Human Viruses
- Author
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Corey Carlson, Samuel Melvin Goodfellow, Nicole Allen, Pleuni S. Pennings, Milo Aviles, Jacky Lo, Rima Singh, Andrew R. Mahoney, Shannel Bermudez, Rebecca L. Melton, Anjani Pradhananga, Annie Shieh, Mordecai Hecht, Sarah Cobey, William Bauer, Francisca L. Catalan, Kellen Hopp, Edgar Castellanos, Ryan Winstead, Hasan Sulaeman, Angeline Katia Chemel, Rosalind M Eggo, Alejandro G. Lopez, Ricky Thu, Adrienne Le, Victoria R. Caudill, Trevor Bedford, E. Geo Pineda, Livia Tran, Andrea López, Fernando G. Lorenzo, Dwayne Evans, Sarina Qin, Gabriela Do Nascimento, Amirhossein Jaberi, Nicole S. Rodrigues, Oana Carja, Katia Koelle, Brittany A. Baker, Gordon T. Luu, Elizabeth J. Winters, Krystal Tran, Christen Kinney, Natalie Fiutek, Scott William Roy, Roland R. Regoes, Katrina A. Lythgoe, Caroline Solis, Jasmeen Kaur, Emily Fryer, Albert Wong, Kaho H. Tisthammer, Derek Lao, Jacob Elliot, E. Deshawn Hopson, and Jasmine Sims
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,viruses ,CpG sites ,Mutations ,Viruses ,Fitness costs ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Genome ,Virus ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Gene ,Allele frequency ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,Mutation ,Original Paper ,Transition (genetics) ,3. Good health ,030104 developmental biology ,CpG site ,Animal ecology ,GenBank ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Mutations can occur throughout the virus genome and may be beneficial, neutral or deleterious. We are interested in mutations that yield a C next to a G, producing CpG sites. CpG sites are rare in eukaryotic and viral genomes. For the eukaryotes, it is thought that CpG sites are rare because they are prone to mutation when methylated. In viruses, we know less about why CpG sites are rare. A previous study in HIV suggested that CpG-creating transition mutations are more costly than similar non-CpG-creating mutations. To determine if this is the case in other viruses, we analyzed the allele frequencies of CpG-creating and non-CpG-creating mutations across various strains, subtypes, and genes of viruses using existing data obtained from Genbank, HIV Databases, and Virus Pathogen Resource. Our results suggest that CpG sites are indeed costly for most viruses. By understanding the cost of CpG sites, we can obtain further insights into the evolution and adaptation of viruses., Evolutionary Ecology, 34, ISSN:0269-7653, ISSN:1573-8477
- Published
- 2019
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100. Effects of vineyard inter-row management on the diversity and abundance of plants and surface-dwelling invertebrates in Central Romania
- Author
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Jacob Buchholz, Pascal Querner, Nicole Penke, Johann G. Zaller, Silvia Winter, Ioana Nae, Bálint Markó, Daniela Popescu, Claudiu Ioan Bunea, Melania Stan, Andrei Giurginca, Minodora Manu, István Urák, Werner Ulrich, Cristina Fiera, and Sophie Kratschmer
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Range (biology) ,Biodiversity ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Vineyard ,Tillage ,Abundance (ecology) ,Arthropods ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,2. Zero hunger ,Original Paper ,Viticulture ,Vineyard biodiversity ,Ecology ,Vascular plants ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Vegetation ,15. Life on land ,Biodiversity hotspot ,Animal ecology ,Insect Science ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Species richness ,Trophic groups - Abstract
Vineyard inter-rows are important biodiversity hotspots within agricultural landscapes, especially when they are covered with vegetation. However, little is known on the effects to management intensity on a broad range of surface-dwelling invertebrates and their interaction with vegetation. We assessed the diversity and activity density of ants, beetles, millipedes, mites, spiders, springtails and woodlice using pitfall traps in vineyards with either high management intensity (HI) consisting of frequently tilled inter-rows or low management intensity (LO) with alternating tillage in every second inter-row. The study was performed in the Târnave wine region in Central Romania. We wanted to know whether, (i) vineyard management intensity affects the diversity of plants and invertebrates, and (ii) local habitat characteristics affect species richness of different functional guilds and taxa. Species richness of some invertebrate taxa (Coleoptera, Araneae, Formicidae) did significantly differ between HI and LO vineyards. Only phytophages (some Coleoptera) increased in species richness and activity density with vegetation cover. Vineyard soil properties (organic matter content, pH, P, and K) did not significantly differ between HI and LO vineyards. We conclude that vineyard inter-row management can affect both the conservation of biodiversity and the provision of biodiversity-driven ecosystem services. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1007/s10841-019-00215-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2019
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