113,862 results on '"WILDLIFE conservation"'
Search Results
2. Can We Protect Every Species?
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KUNZIG, ROBERT
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SPECIES , *BIOLOGICAL extinction , *FISH conservation , *WILDLIFE conservation , *ENDANGERED species , *ENDANGERED species listing - Abstract
There are hundreds of freshwater mussel species, Amacker explained, and almost every one tricks a particular species of fish into raising its larvae. Sources: U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Environmental Conservation Online System; U.S. Federal Endangered and Threatened Species by Calendar Year https://ecos.fws.gov/ecp/report/ species-listings-by-year-totals (annual data through 2022); Listed Species Summary (Boxscore) https:// ecos.fws.gov/ecp/report/boxscore (cumulative data up to September 18, 2023, and annual data for coral); Delisted Species https://ecos.fws.gov/ecp/report/species-delisted (delisted data through 2022) Number of Species Added to the Endangered or Threatened List Each Year* SPECIES REMOVED FROM THE ENDANGERED OR THREATENED LIST* At the end of 2022, some 90 U.S. species had been removed from the Endangered or Threatened lists. ScientificAmerican.com/magazine/sa Snail Darter Percina tanasi Listed as Endangered: 1975 Status: Delisted in 2022 Bald Eagle Haliaeetus leucocephalus Listed as Endangered: 1967 Status: Delisted in 2007 Gopher Tortoise Gopherus polyphemus Listed as Threatened: 1987 Status: Still threatened Snail Darter, Back in Action In the 1970s the Snail Darter, a tiny fish, seemed confined to a segment of the Little Tennessee River, right where the huge Tellico Dam was being built. FEATURES A BALD EAGLE DISAPPEARED into the trees on the far bank of the Tennessee River just as the two researchers at the bow of our modest motorboat began hauling in the trawl net. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
3. Regulatory Performance of Tourist Hunting and Legal Game Meat Trade in Tanzania.
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Kadigi, Reuben M. J.
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HUNTING ,TOURIST attitudes ,WILDLIFE conservation ,STAKEHOLDERS - Abstract
Recently, the government of Tanzania has legalized the sale of game meat under special rules namely the Wildlife Conservation (Game Meat Selling) Regulations of 2020 as an effort to curb illegal hunting. The regulations mention tourist hunting as one of the sources of commercial game meat. Other sources include resident hunting; wildlife farms/ranches/zoos; and culling, cropping, and control of problem animals. In this paper we examine the performance of tourist hunting, legal game meat in the country, and its regulatory framework from the perspectives of key stakeholders, including both public and private or non-state stakeholders. We use a variant of Likert's methods of summated ratings and the cumulative ordinal regression model to analyse and compare the opinions of stakeholders. We found that there are still challenges, especially related to sources of wild animals. Operators of game meat facilities find it difficult to source game meat from tourist hunting companies and the latter are not willing to offer the meat to licensed operators of game meat shops. Our results support the hypothesis that authorization of the game meat trade can serve as one of the boldest conservation tools to mitigate illegal poaching if well-planned and regulated. The results of the cumulative ordinal regression model predict an improvement of 42% in the performance of regulatory framework per unit improvement in the procedures for application and registration of game meat selling facilities (p = 0.010). The paper recommends leveraging stakeholders' active engagement and strengthening cooperation between game meat value chain actors and law-enforcement authorities. An innovative participatory model for enforcing game meat sanitary and safety regulations is also recommended to avoid potential health risks to consumers. It underscores the importance of institutional capacity building, awareness creation, and adequate funding in the fight against illegal hunting and game meat trade. In order for the country to be able to achieve sustainable game meat trade in the country, the challenge of limited wild animal sources has to be addressed, possibly by supporting the establishment of privately owned wild animal farms, ranches, and zoos, this also has its own challenges that need to be addressed too. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
4. ANIMALS ON THE BRINK: Meet some of the most critically endangered animals from around the world and discover why they're on the brink of extinction
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Dutfield, Scott
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Fishes ,Extinction (Biology) ,Wildlife conservation ,Science and technology ,International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources - Abstract
At present, there are more than 44,000 species around the world that are facing the possibility of extinction. Keeping a watchful eye over them is the International Union for Conservation [...]
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- 2024
5. Hepatozoon (Eucoccidiorida: Hepatozoidae) in wild mammals of the Americas: a systematic review
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Richard Thomas, Adriana Santodomingo, Liliana Saboya-Acosta, Julian F. Quintero-Galvis, Lucila Moreno, Juan E. Uribe, and Sebastián Muñoz-Leal
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Arthropod-borne diseases ,Hemogregarines ,Conoidasida ,Phylogeny ,Haplotype diversity ,Wildlife conservation ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background The study of parasites provides insight into intricate ecological relationships in ecosystem dynamics, food web structures, and evolution on multiple scales. Hepatozoon (Eucoccidiorida: Hepatozoidae) is a genus of protozoan hemoparasites with heteroxenous life cycles that switch infections between vertebrates and blood-feeding invertebrates. The most comprehensive review of the genus was published 26 years ago, and currently there are no harmonized data on the epizootiology, diagnostics, genotyping methods, evolutionary relationships, and genetic diversity of Hepatozoon in the Americas. Methods Here, we provide a comprehensive review based on the PRISMA method regarding Hepatozoon in wild mammals within the American continent, in order to generate a framework for future research. Results 11 out of the 35 countries of the Americas (31.4%) had data on Hepatozoon, with Carnivora and Rodentia orders having the most characterizations. Bats, ungulates, and shrews were the least affected groups. While Hepatozoon americanum, H. americanum-like, H. canis, H. didelphydis, H. felis, H. milleri, H. griseisciuri, and H. procyonis correspond to the identified species, a plethora of genospecies is pending for a formal description combining morphology and genetics. Most of the vectors of Hepatozoon in the Americas are unknown, but some flea, mite, and tick species have been confirmed. The detection of Hepatozoon has relied mostly on conventional polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and the implementation of specific real time PCR for the genus needs to be employed to improve its diagnosis in wild animals in the future. From a genetic perspective, the V4 region of the 18S rRNA gene has been widely sequenced for the identification of Hepatozoon in wild animals. However, mitochondrial and apicoplast markers should also be targeted to truly determine different species in the genus. A phylogenetic analysis of herein retrieved 18S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequences showed two main clades of Hepatozoon: Clade I associated with small mammals, birds, and herpetozoa, and Clade II associated with Carnivora. The topology of the tree is also reflected in the haplotype network. Conclusions Finally, our review emphasizes Hepatozoon as a potential disease agent in threatened wild mammals and the role of wild canids as spreaders of Hepatozoon infections in the Americas. Graphical Abstract
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- 2024
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6. Wild Edible Mushroom Lore in a Suburban Mestizo Community
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Bautista-Bautista, W.K., Diaz-Aguilar, I., Perez-Moreno, J., Frutis-Molina, I., and Ruan-Soto, F.
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- 2024
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7. Politics of Colonial Conservation in Kenya
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Shanguhyia, Martin S.
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- 2024
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8. IN MEMORIAM ROBERT M. INGLE 1917-1997
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Geiger, Stephen P.
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National Shellfisheries Association ,Marine sciences ,Wildlife conservation ,Natural resources ,Research institutes ,Biological sciences ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
Visitors to the headquarters of the Fish and Wildlife Research Institute (FWRI) in St. Petersburg, FL, the Research Division of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, typically enter through [...]
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- 2023
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9. An assessment of the state of conservation planning in Europe.
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Jung, Martin, Alagador, Diogo, Chapman, Melissa, Hermoso, Virgilio, Kujala, Heini, O'Connor, Louise, Schinegger, Rafaela, Verburg, Peter H., and Visconti, Piero
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SCIENTIFIC literature , *DECISION theory , *WILDLIFE conservation , *HABITAT conservation , *BIODIVERSITY , *MULTIPLE criteria decision making - Abstract
Expanding and managing current habitat and species protection measures is at the heart of the European biodiversity strategy. A structured approach is needed to gain insights into such issues is systematic conservation planning, which uses techniques from decision theory to identify places and actions that contribute most effectively to policy objectives given a set of constraints. Yet culturally and historically determined European landscapes make the implementation of any conservation plans challenging, requiring an analysis of synergies and trade-offs before implementation. In this work, we review the scientific literature for evidence of previous conservation planning approaches, highlighting recent advances and success stories. We find that the conceptual characteristics of European conservation planning studies likely reduced their potential in contributing to better-informed decisions. We outline pathways towards improving the uptake of decision theory and multi-criteria conservation planning at various scales, particularly highlighting the need for (a) open data and intuitive tools, (b) the integration of biodiversity-focused conservation planning with multiple objectives, (c) accounting of dynamic ecological processes and functions, and (d) better facilitation of entry-points and co-design practices of conservation planning scenarios with stakeholders. By adopting and improving these practices, European conservation planning might become more actionable and adaptable towards implementable policy outcomes. This article is part of the theme issue 'Ecological novelty and planetary stewardship: biodiversity dynamics in a transforming biosphere'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Bee and butterfly records indicate diversity losses in western and southern North America, but extensive knowledge gaps remain.
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Souther, Sara K., Sandor, Manette E., Sample, Martha, Gabrielson, Sara, and Aslan, Clare E.
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POLLINATORS , *BIOTIC communities , *BEES , *WILDLIFE conservation , *GENE flow , *ECOLOGICAL impact , *TRADITIONAL ecological knowledge - Abstract
Pollinator losses threaten ecosystems and food security, diminishing gene flow and reproductive output for ecological communities and impacting ecosystem services broadly. For four focal families of bees and butterflies, we constructed over 1400 ensemble species distribution models over two time periods for North America. Models indicated disproportionally increased richness in eastern North America over time, with decreases in richness over time in the western US and southern Mexico. To further pinpoint geographic areas of vulnerability, we mapped records of potential pollinator species of conservation concern and found high concentrations of detections in the Great Lakes region, US East Coast, and southern Canada. Finally, we estimated asymptotic diversity indices for genera known to include species that visit flowers and may carry pollen for ecoregions across two time periods. Patterns of generic diversity through time mirrored those of species-level analyses, again indicating a decline in pollinators in the western U.S. Increases in generic diversity were observed in cooler and wetter ecoregions. Overall, changes in pollinator diversity appear to reflect changes in climate, though other factors such as land use change may also explain regional shifts. While statistical methods were employed to account for unequal sampling effort across regions and time, improved monitoring efforts with rigorous sampling designs would provide a deeper understanding of pollinator communities and their responses to ongoing environmental change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. High-precision tracking and positioning for monitoring Holstein cattle.
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Luo, Wei, Zhang, Guoqing, Yuan, Quanbo, Zhao, Yongxiang, Chen, Hongce, Zhou, Jingjie, Meng, Zhaopeng, Wang, Fulong, Li, Lin, Liu, Jiandong, Wang, Guanwu, Wang, Penggang, and Yu, Zhongde
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HOLSTEIN-Friesian cattle , *WILDLIFE conservation , *TRACKING algorithms , *WILDLIFE monitoring , *DOMESTIC animals , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *PRECISION farming , *ANIMAL culture - Abstract
Enhanced animal welfare has emerged as a pivotal element in contemporary precision animal husbandry, with bovine monitoring constituting a significant facet of precision agriculture. The evolution of intelligent agriculture in recent years has significantly facilitated the integration of drone flight monitoring tools and innovative systems, leveraging deep learning to interpret bovine behavior. Smart drones, outfitted with monitoring systems, have evolved into viable solutions for wildlife protection and monitoring as well as animal husbandry. Nevertheless, challenges arise under actual and multifaceted ranch conditions, where scale alterations, unpredictable movements, and occlusions invariably influence the accurate tracking of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). To address these challenges, this manuscript proposes a tracking algorithm based on deep learning, adhering to the Joint Detection Tracking (JDT) paradigm established by the CenterTrack algorithm. This algorithm is designed to satisfy the requirements of multi-objective tracking in intricate practical scenarios. In comparison with several preeminent tracking algorithms, the proposed Multi-Object Tracking (MOT) algorithm demonstrates superior performance in Multiple Object Tracking Accuracy (MOTA), Multiple Object Tracking Precision (MOTP), and IDF1. Additionally, it exhibits enhanced efficiency in managing Identity Switches (ID), False Positives (FP), and False Negatives (FN). This algorithm proficiently mitigates the inherent challenges of MOT in complex, livestock-dense scenarios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Wildlife conservation through traditional values: alarming numbers of crocodile attacks reported from Timor-Leste.
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Brackhane, Sebastian, Fukuda, Yusuke, Xavier, Flaminio M.E., de Araujo, Vitorino, Gusmao, Marcal, Trindade, Josh, do Amaral de Carvalho, Demétrio, Dos Reis Pires, Rui, and Webb, Grahame
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WILDLIFE conservation , *CROCODILES , *BEACHES - Abstract
On the IUCN Red List the saltwater crocodile Crocodylus porosus is categorized globally as Least Concern, with national populations ranging from fully recovered to extinct. The saltwater crocodile population of the Southeast Asian island nation of Timor-Leste was severely depleted by colonial hunting but has recovered since independence in 2002. During 2007–2014 there was a 23-fold increase in reported crocodile attacks (104 documented attacks), concomitant with a 2% annual increase in the human population. Public tolerance to attacks and the reluctance to harm crocodiles are entwined with reverence of crocodiles as sacred beings by most but not all Timorese people. In 2022, 7–8 years after our previous assessment, we visited five sites on the south coast of Timor-Leste in Lautém, Viqueque, Manufahí and Cova Lima municipalities. High rates of crocodile attacks continue. We obtained 35 records of attacks for 2015–2022 (34% fatal). In the municipalities where crocodile attacks occurred (Lautém, Viqueque, Cova Lima), the sacred status of crocodiles prevented inhabitants from harming them in retribution. In Manufahí, where no attacks were reported, such traditional values never existed and crocodiles were hunted for subsistence and to improve safety. The design of a context-specific crocodile management programme that respects the reverence attributed to crocodiles by most people but reduces the risk of people being attacked by crocodiles is a conservation management challenge for the government of Timor-Leste. The developing tourism industry, which relies on coastal beaches and reefs, is jeopardized by the risk of crocodile attacks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Threatened or poorly known? The case of the Mediterranean narrow endemic Valeriana amazonum in Sardinia.
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Fenu, Giuseppe, Calderisi, Giulia, and Cogoni, Donatella
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VALERIANA , *ENDEMIC plants , *ENDEMIC species , *WILDLIFE conservation , *PLANT species - Abstract
The Mediterranean flora is characterized by a high number of narrow endemic plant species that are often restricted to a few small populations. One of these species, Valeriana amazonum , a perennial plant occurring only in the Supramontes region of central eastern Sardinia, is categorized as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List because of its restricted range, small population size and an inferred decline caused by several threats. During 2007–2022, we monitored all mature individuals of this plant annually and surveyed ecologically suitable sites for the species. We identified two previously unknown populations and also learnt of two successful translocations carried out independently by an unknown local citizen. As our monitoring data indicate there has been no decline in the number of mature individuals over the period of monitoring, the species' conservation status requires reassessment. We recommend that V. amazonum should be recategorized as Near Threatened as it seems to be poorly known rather than highly threatened. This could also be the case with other narrow Mediterranean endemics, especially those that grow in inaccessible habitats for which long-term studies are needed to assess conservation status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Status of the Critically Endangered gharial Gavialis gangeticus in the upper Ghaghara River, India, and its conservation in the Girwa–Ghaghara Rivers.
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Vashistha, Gaurav, Ranjan, Vivek, Singh, Devvrat, Ugemuge, Shantanu S., Badhawan, Akash Deep, and Gupta, Pulkit
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WILDLIFE conservation , *RIVER conservation , *WILDLIFE refuges , *WATERSHEDS , *PROTECTED areas - Abstract
The gharial Gavialis gangeticus is a Critically Endangered crocodilian endemic to the Indian subcontinent. Habitat modification by river damming and water extraction has caused a severe decline in its population. The status of the gharial is known within protected areas, but there have been few surveys for this species in unprotected areas. In Katerniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary, a breeding gharial population in Girijapuri Barrage Reservoir has low recruitment, and it has been hypothesized that yearlings disperse downstream into the unprotected Ghaghara River when the barrage gates are opened. We surveyed a 100-km stretch of the Ghaghara River from the Girijapuri Barrage to Chahlari Ghat, observing a total of 84 gharials, including a high proportion of juveniles. A survey in 2021 from Chahlari Ghat to Ayodhya observed 174 gharials, giving a combined total of 258 gharials in a 219-km stretch of the Ghaghara River for the two surveys. Together, these findings confirm the presence of a significant population of gharials in the Ghaghara River. We recommend the adoption of an integrated approach, involving government agencies and local communities along the river, to conserve the protected Girwa–Kaudiyala Rivers and the unprotected Ghaghara River for gharial conservation and recovery. Such a programme will need to tackle the threats facing the gharial and establish baseline data and long-term monitoring protocols for freshwater species conservation in this river system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Identifying minimum freshwater habitat conditions for an endangered fish using life cycle analysis.
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Polansky, Leo, Mitchell, Lara, and Nobriga, Matthew L.
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POPULATION viability analysis , *FRESHWATER habitats , *RARE fishes , *ANIMAL life cycles , *CLIMATE change , *WILDLIFE conservation , *SMELL - Abstract
Identifying the most important factors affecting population growth in animal life cycles is an important tool of species conservation. Delta Smelt (Hypomesus transpacificus), an annual fish endemic to the San Francisco Estuary in California (USA), has been provided legal protection since 1993 but 30 years later exists in a conservation‐reliant state on the brink of extinction. Despite considerable controversies about what factors are most responsible for the species' decline, no population growth rate sensitivity comparisons between the most important factors regulating growth have been done. Nor has anyone attempted to quantitatively identify habitat conditions needed to support positive population growth. We developed a set of stage‐structured population models to link habitat indices regulating recruitment of new generations of fish as they metamorphosed into juveniles and the subsequent survival of those fish over several seasons until they reached adulthood. These models are used to quantify drivers of growth rate variation over 30 years. Several complimentary sensitivity analyses indicated freshwater outflow to the estuary during summer had the largest potential to change population growth. Multiple habitat metrics (e.g., food availability, temperature) influencing recruitment and life stage specific survival rates across different seasons interacted in nonlinear ways to determine habitat conditions and water management targets associated with positive population growth. We discuss the implications for freshwater management, Delta Smelt conservation, and the challenges climate change poses for co‐implementation of these two societal priorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Anthropogenic pressure limits the recovery of a postwar leopard population in central Mozambique.
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Briers‐Louw, Willem D., Kendon, Tamar, Rogan, Matthew S., Leslie, Alison J., Almeida, João, Gaynor, David, and Naude, Vincent N.
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WILDLIFE conservation , *LEOPARD , *POACHING prevention , *WILDLIFE management areas , *WAR - Abstract
The population size and conservation status of wildlife in post‐conflict areas is often uncertain. In Mozambique, decades of armed conflict resulted in large‐scale wildlife population depletion with limited conservation and research opportunities. The African leopard (Panthera pardus) is a large carnivore with great ecological and economic significance, yet their population status is largely unknown within Mozambique. Using camera trapping in conjunction with robust spatially explicit capture‐recapture modeling, we estimated leopard density in 2021 for Coutada 11, a wildlife management area in the postwar Zambezi Delta landscape of central Mozambique. Leopard density was relatively low (1.57 ± 0.37 SE [latent‐mixture‐model] and 1.84 ± 0.41 [sex‐mixture‐model] leopards/100 km2), occurring in the bottom fourth of 161 range‐wide leopard densities, and similar to those from semiarid and human‐dominated landscapes. Prey‐based carrying capacity estimates suggested that leopard density should be at least twice as large. Despite a recent and substantial reduction in poaching activity, evidence of snared leopards indicates that sustained bushmeat poaching, combined with sustainable, but additional legal offtake is suppressing leopard population recovery. This study provides important baseline insight into leopard population density in Mozambique and joins mounting evidence indicating that anthropogenic pressures limit large carnivore populations which is of major national and global concern. We suggest long‐term monitoring of this leopard population to determine trends over time and implement effective conservation interventions in response to population changes. This population clearly has the capacity to recover if hunting quotas are reduced to account for illegal offtake and, more importantly, if anti‐poaching efforts are redoubled to reduce unsustainable anthropogenic mortality of leopards. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Comparing local ecological knowledge with camera trap data to study mammal occurrence in anthropogenic landscapes of the Garden Route Biosphere Reserve.
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Bernard, Alice, Guerbois, Chloé, Venter, Jan A., and Fritz, Hervé
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BIOSPHERE reserves , *LANDSCAPE gardening , *LOCAL knowledge , *NUMBERS of species , *MAMMAL communities , *TRADITIONAL ecological knowledge - Abstract
Accurate information on wildlife occurrence in anthropogenic landscapes is essential to develop effective conservation measures. Monitoring multiple mammal species in heterogeneous landscapes can be challenging because of the diversity of land‐uses and species behaviors. Therefore, different monitoring methods are better adapted to different contexts. We compared data obtained from camera traps with data gathered through an online survey to document the presence of mammal species in mosaic landscapes of the Garden Route Biosphere Reserve in South Africa. The survey detected the same 15 species as the camera traps as well as the additional common duiker. Both methods effectively detected most large mammal species, whereas results were less consistent for smaller species and carnivores. Combining the two methods enabled us to produce more robust estimates of species absence and confirm species presence reported by survey respondents. In less disturbed areas, respondents with good ecological knowledge were effective at monitoring mammal species, while extending the spatial coverage of the study. Bearing in mind the limitations of each method, camera traps and an online survey could complement each other if combined. Together, they can provide a more comprehensive understanding of mammal communities in anthropogenic landscapes, increasing both spatial coverage and the number of species sightings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Perceived Impacts of Wildlife on Agropastoral Food Production in Northern Tanzania.
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Raycraft, Justin
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FOOD production , *WILDLIFE conservation , *AGRICULTURAL productivity , *EXTERNALITIES , *SEMI-structured interviews , *ECOSYSTEMS , *ANIMAL populations - Abstract
Human-wildlife interactions can affect human wellbeing and wildlife population persistence. This paper addresses the perceived impacts of wildlife on agropastoral food production in the Tarangire ecosystem of northern Tanzania. It is based on sixteen months of collaborative ethnographic fieldwork with agropastoral Maasai communities (2019–2020; 2022; 2023), 240 semi-structured interviews, and a household survey (n = 1076). People felt that caterpillars, elephants, and zebras had the most significant effects on crop production, while hyenas were responsible for the bulk of livestock depredation by carnivores. These social costs of wildlife merit further attention from conservation policy makers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Identification of Rare Wildlife in the Field Environment Based on the Improved YOLOv5 Model.
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Su, Xiaohui, Zhang, Jiawei, Ma, Zhibin, Dong, Yanqi, Zi, Jiali, Xu, Nuo, Zhang, Haiyan, Xu, Fu, and Chen, Feixiang
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Research on wildlife monitoring methods is a crucial tool for the conservation of rare wildlife in China. However, the fact that rare wildlife monitoring images in field scenes are easily affected by complex scene information, poorly illuminated, obscured, and blurred limits their use. This often results in unstable recognition and low accuracy levels. To address this issue, this paper proposes a novel wildlife identification model for rare animals in Giant Panda National Park (GPNP). We redesigned the C3 module of YOLOv5 using NAMAttention and the MemoryEfficientMish activation function to decrease the weight of field scene features. Additionally, we integrated the WIoU boundary loss function to mitigate the influence of low-quality images during training, resulting in the development of the NMW-YOLOv5 model. Our model achieved 97.3% for mAP50 and 83.3% for mAP50:95 in the LoTE-Animal dataset. When comparing the model with some classical YOLO models for the purpose of conducting comparison experiments, it surpasses the current best-performing model by 1.6% for mAP50:95, showcasing a high level of recognition accuracy. In the generalization ability test, the model has a low error rate for most rare wildlife species and is generally able to identify wildlife in the wild environment of the GPNP with greater accuracy. It has been demonstrated that NMW-YOLOv5 significantly enhances wildlife recognition accuracy in field environments by eliminating irrelevant features and extracting deep, effective features. Furthermore, it exhibits strong detection and recognition capabilities for rare wildlife in GPNP field environments. This could offer a new and effective tool for rare wildlife monitoring in GPNP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Habitat use of anadromous and amphidromous sturgeons in North America: a systematic review.
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Gilligan-Lunda, Erin K., Duarte, Adam, and Peterson, James T.
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STURGEONS , *WILDLIFE conservation , *RARE fishes , *ENDANGERED species , *WATER hardness , *KNOWLEDGE gap theory - Abstract
Sturgeons are among the most endangered fishes in the world. Identifying habitat use characteristics to inform restoration projects is crucial for recovery. However, small sample sizes, inadequate replication of studies, and limited spatial extents complicate our ability to effectively apply the findings of single studies to endangered species conservation across the larger riverscape. We synthesized information from amphidromous and anadromous sturgeons in North America to identify species-specific knowledge gaps and conduct a quantitative comparison of species–habitat relationships. We provided a qualitative summary of substrate use and synthesized estimates of depth and velocity during spawning and non-spawning activity. Generalized patterns among species were identified, such as spawning in fast water on hard substrate and then using slow water with soft substrate areas when not spawning. We noted species-specific variability during spawning that may be attributed to historical maximum length, egg characteristics, and watershed features. This study provides some of the first estimates of habitat use that can be adapted for many populations. Results can contribute to empirically grounded decision-support tools used to prioritize information needs for recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Phylogenetic identity and population structure of the dwarf caimans Paleosuchus spp. in the Orinoco basin of Colombia and Venezuela: filling gaps.
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Hernández-Rangel, Sandra M, Morales-Betancourt, Mónica A, Muniz, Fábio L, Vargas-Ramírez, Mario, Rojas-Runjaic, Fernando J M, Lasso, Carlos A, and Caballero, Susana
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GENETIC variation , *HABITAT modification , *WILDLIFE conservation , *ECOLOGICAL regions , *CROCODILIANS - Abstract
Dwarf caiman species of the genus Paleosuchus (Paleosuchus palpebrosus and Paleosuchus trigonatus) are old, widespread crocodilian lineages with populations affected by habitat modification. For both species, phylogeographical studies revealing crucial information have already been performed, but for important ecoregions, such as the Orinoco, knowledge is lacking. In this study, the phylogenetic identity of individuals of Paleosuchus spp. from the Orinoco basin of Colombia and Venezuela was evaluated. The genetic structure of the two species of Paleosuchus was also determined and their genetic diversity quantified. The results show a marked genetic structuring in both species, also indicating that the populations of P. trigonatus and P. palpebrosus of the Orinoco basin are well differentiated from those of other hydrographic basins. For Colombia, it was possible to infer that there are two independent management units for both species (Orinoco and Amazonas) and that the populations of the Orinoco basin present high genetic and haplotypic diversity. In Venezuela, only one management unit was identified for each species. This finding, together with the results of previous studies, show that, in total, there are at least five management units for P. palpebrosus and six for P. trigonatus , throughout their distribution areas. It is necessary to take this information into account when establishing conservation strategies for these species, although it is stressed that the geographical sampling must be improved in future phylogeographical studies, because information gaps persist at the geographical level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Hybridization and backcrossing between the endangered brown shrike (Lanius cristatus superciliosus) and the common bull-headed shrike (L. bucephalus bucephalus).
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Mizumura, Haruka, Kubota, Kôhei, Nishiumi, Isao, Imanishi, Sadao, Mochizuki, Mizuki, and Higuchi, Hiroyoshi
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INTROGRESSION (Genetics) , *SPECIES hybridization , *GENE flow , *ENDANGERED species , *BIOLOGISTS , *WILDLIFE conservation - Abstract
Interspecific hybridization has long been of interest to biologists due to its implications for species concepts, gene flow, and conservation. We found a putative hybrid between the endangered brown shrike (Lanius cristatus superciliosus) and the common bull-headed shrike (Lanius bucephalus) at the foot of Mt. Fuji, central Japan, where the adult sex ratio of brown shrikes is biased towards the male. Brown and bull-headed shrikes are closely related, and their hybridization is critical for the survival and conservation of the brown shrike. We tried to identify this individual based on genetic, morphological, plumage, and acoustic analysis. The hybrid had intermediate genetic, morphological, and plumage features between the two parental species. The maternal lineage of the hybrid was suggested to be the bull-headed shrike by COI analysis. We thus conclude that the hybrid resulted from interbreeding between a male brown shrike and a female bull-headed shrike, and a skewed sex ratio in the brown shrike may have contributed to this hybridization. Skewed sex ratio is a useful indicator of population viability and knowledge of this is helpful in rare species conservation. Genetic introgression between brown and bull-headed shrikes cannot be denied because the hybrid individual was fertile and backcrossing occurred. Exploring past and ongoing genetic relationships of the shrikes has led to insights into the evolutionary background and the potential of hybridization in an evolutionary context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. Pesticide Contamination Levels in the Stomach Contents of Wild Raccoons (Procyon lotor) and Masked Palm Civets (Paguma larvata) in Japan.
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Shinya, So, Sashika, Mariko, Minamikawa, Miku, Itoh, Tetsuji, Tanikawa, Tsutomu, Tanaka, Kazuyuki D., Nakayama, Shouta M. M., Ishizuka, Mayumi, and Ikenaka, Yoshinori
- Subjects
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PESTICIDES , *RACCOON , *GASTROINTESTINAL contents , *INSECTICIDES , *LIQUID chromatography-mass spectrometry , *WILDLIFE conservation - Abstract
Pesticides, which are vital for agriculture, pose a significant threat to wildlife in transformed Japanese landscapes. Despite global reports of pesticide poisoning in animals, limited studies have examined current wildlife exposure in croplands or metropolitan areas in the region. Using liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS) and gas chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (GC–MS/MS), our study aimed to assess the contamination status of 368 commonly used pesticides. The stomach contents of raccoons living in croplands contained 13 pesticides, including six herbicides and 11 fungicides. Neonicotinoid insecticides, some fungicides, and previously banned insecticides (benzene hexachloride and dichlofenthion) were most frequently detected and found at the highest concentrations, suggesting direct soil–plant transfer and direct consumption by crop‐eating species. In masked palm civets living in metropolitan areas, four insecticides and six fungicides were detected, indicating urban wildlife exposure from raided dustbins, urban gardens, and lumber from houses. Although the maximum measured concentrations of all pesticides were lower than the acceptable daily intake for humans, it remains unclear whether these concentrations may have toxic or adverse health effects on the species evaluated in these transformed landscapes. Our study is the first to examine recent pesticide exposures in wild mammals in Japan. Application of the method we developed will lay the foundation for the examination of pesticides in other wildlife species to assist conservation management efforts in the region. Environ Toxicol Chem 2024;43:943–951. © 2024 SETAC [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. Interaction between regional temperature and shade level shapes saproxylic beetle communities.
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Goßmann, Anika, Öckinger, Erik, Schroeder, Martin, Lindman, Ly, and Ranius, Thomas
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GLOBAL warming , *WILDLIFE conservation , *BEETLES , *NUMBERS of species , *NORWAY spruce , *HABITAT selection - Abstract
Aim: The 'concept of relative constancy of habitats' assumes that species differ in their habitat preferences depending on the regional temperature so that all populations experience similar microclimatic conditions. Our aim was to assess the relevance of this concept by disentangling the effects of shade level and regional temperature on southern and northern distributed saproxylic (=dead wood dependent) beetle species. Location: Sweden. Methods: We established a field experiment by placing 435 logs of Norway spruce (Picea abies) along shade gradients in six regions differing in regional temperature (along a 1200 km latitudinal gradient). For each log, we sampled the saproxylic beetle community and calculated the Community Temperature Index (CTI), indicating to what extent the community is dominated by southern or northern species. Results: Species richness and total abundance were better explained by shade level, whereas species composition was better explained by study region. In colder regions, CTI varied along the shade gradient, whereas in warmer regions, CTI was more similar along the shade gradient. Moreover, in colder regions, the number of southern species was higher in sun‐exposed logs, whereas in warmer regions, the number of southern species was higher in shaded logs. This supports the concept of relative constancy of habitats. In contrast, northern species preferred shaded conditions regardless of the regional temperature. Main Conclusions: Regional temperature, shade level and resulting microclimate are important drivers of species richness, total abundance and composition. Occurrence patterns of saproxylic beetle species follow to some extent the concept of relative constancy of habitats since their habitat preferences vary with regional temperature. Northern species are of conservation concern due to disadvantages by climate warming and clear‐cutting. They are favoured by preserving forests with rarely disturbed canopies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. Building Trust and Honouring Agreements in the Supply of Protected Wildlife Products.
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Wong, Rebecca W Y
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WILDLIFE products , *TRUST , *WILDLIFE conservation , *ETHNICITY , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
This paper draws on interview data and published court judgment reports to reveal first-hand accounts of illegal transactions involving protected wildlife and how criminals collaborate with one another. This research finds that wildlife supply is controlled by a small number of key suppliers. Further, trust is embedded in the criminals' relationship based on kinship and friendship ties, while individuals' ethnicity and reputation also facilitate collaboration. These arrangements shape the criminal networks that exploit protected wildlife. This paper suggests further research into online trading of protected wildlife products, the presence of women in the illegal wildlife trade and the impact of COVID-19 on the criminal networks supplying wildlife. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Bird‐habitat associations and local‐scale vegetation structure in lowland brushlands.
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Hawkinson, Annie J., Montgomery, Rebecca A., Roy, Charlotte L., Shartell, Lindsey M., Andersen, David E., Stevens, Thomas K., Knosalla, Lori J., and Frelich, Lee E.
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- *
WOODY plants , *WILDLIFE conservation , *POISSON regression , *SPECIES diversity , *BIRD breeding , *PLANT species , *TUNDRAS , *BIRD populations - Abstract
Brushlands support a diverse suite of bird species, including species of conservation concern in the western Great Lakes region of central North America. Information on how to effectively manage lowland brushlands for birds and associations between breeding birds and local‐scale vegetation structure and composition is lacking. We surveyed lowland brushlands from 2016–2018 in Minnesota, USA, to assess bird‐habitat associations using avian point‐count surveys and fixed‐radius vegetation plots. We used Poisson regression models to assess the associations between breeding bird species richness, total abundance, and abundance of frequently detected species (using counts as an index for abundance) to woody stem density and height, patchiness of woody stem density, variation of woody stem height, and number of woody plant species. Sedge wrens (Cistothorus stellaris), the most abundant species, were negatively associated with multiple woody plant metrics and positively associated with patchiness. Common yellowthroats (Geothlypis trichas) were the second‐most abundant species and associated with low‐stature woody plants (<1 m based on average heights in study sites). Bird species richness, alder flycatchers (Empidonax alnorum), chestnut‐sided warblers (Setophaga pensylvanica), swamp sparrows (Melospiza georgiana), veeries (Catharus fuscescens), and yellow warblers (Setophaga petechia) increased with woody vegetation height. Chestnut‐sided warbler and Nashville warbler (Leiothlypis ruficapilla) abundances also increased with woody stem density. We suggest that managing lowland brushlands to promote diverse woody plant structure, including tall shrubs and areas with patchy, open herbaceous cover, by implementing temporally and spatially variable disturbance regimes, may benefit bird species that rely on lowland brushlands with a range of vegetation structure requirements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Methylation‐based markers for the estimation of age in African cheetah, Acinonyx jubatus.
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Le Clercq, Louis‐Stéphane, Kotzé, Antoinette, Grobler, J. Paul, and Dalton, Desiré L.
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- *
CHEETAH , *WILDLIFE conservation , *CRITICAL currents , *CLASS differences , *STATISTICAL correlation , *POPULATION aging - Abstract
Age is a key demographic in conservation where age classes show differences in important population metrics such as morbidity and mortality. Several traits, including reproductive potential, also show senescence with ageing. Thus, the ability to estimate age of individuals in a population is critical in understanding the current structure as well as their future fitness. Many methods exist to determine age in wildlife, with most using morphological features that show inherent variability with age. These methods require significant expertise and become less accurate in adult age classes, often the most critical groups to model. Molecular methods have been applied to measuring key population attributes, and more recently epigenetic attributes such as methylation have been explored as biomarkers for age. There are, however, several factors such as permits, sample sovereignty, and costs that may preclude the use of extant methods in a conservation context. This study explored the utility of measuring age‐related changes in methylation in candidate genes using mass array technology. Novel methods are described for using gene orthologues to identify and assay regions for differential methylation. To illustrate the potential application, African cheetah was used as a case study. Correlation analyses identified six methylation sites with an age relationship, used to develop a model with sufficient predictive power for most conservation contexts. This model was more accurate than previous attempts using PCR and performed similarly to candidate gene studies in other mammal species. Mass array presents an accurate and cost‐effective method for age estimation in wildlife of conservation concern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Natural resource enterprises – income diversification and land conservation on privately owned lands in the United States (U.S.).
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Jones, W. Daryl
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NATURAL resources , *NATURE reserves , *WILDLIFE conservation , *NATURAL resources management , *WILDLIFE-related recreation , *HABITATS - Abstract
Wildlife-related recreation is popular throughout the world with Americans spending over $150 billion dollars (U.S.) annually. I have conducted educational workshops (>200 events) to train U.S. landowners in natural resource enterprise management and operations offering recreational hunting, angling, and nature tourism excursions along with conservation management practices to enhance wildlife habitats on their lands. To measure impacts from these workshops, I conducted a comprehensive mail survey study with participants since 2010. Study findings revealed that private landowners who initiated wildlife-related recreational enterprises earned annual incomes and implemented conservation practices on their lands. More targeted training for landowners is recommended to enhance income diversification on privately owned lands and to increase conservation of wildlife habitats, land stewardship, and ecosystem services (i.e., clean water, biodiversity, and conservation zones) beneficial to society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Fixed points stability, bifurcation analysis, and chaos control of a Lotka–Volterra model with two predators and their prey.
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Abbasi, Muhammad Aqib
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- *
HOPF bifurcations , *SUSTAINABILITY , *LOTKA-Volterra equations , *BIFURCATION theory , *PREDATION , *WILDLIFE management , *WILDLIFE conservation - Abstract
The study of the population dynamics of a three-species Lotka–Volterra model is crucial in gaining a deeper understanding of the delicate balance between prey and predator populations. This research takes a unique approach by exploring the stability of fixed points and the occurrence of Hopf bifurcation. By using the bifurcation theory, our study provides a comprehensive analysis of the conditions for the existence of Hopf bifurcation. This is validated through detailed numerical simulations and visual representations that demonstrate the potential for chaos in these systems. To mitigate this instability, we employ a hybrid control strategy that ensures the stability of the controlled model even in the presence of Hopf bifurcation. This research is not only significant in advancing the field of ecology but also has far-reaching practical implications for wildlife management and conservation efforts. Our results provide a deeper understanding of the complex dynamics of prey–predator interactions and have the potential to inform sustainable management practices and ensure the survival of these species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Ecology of fear alters behavior of grizzly bears exposed to bear‐viewing ecotourism.
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Short, Monica L., Service, Christina N., Suraci, Justin P., Artelle, Kyle A., Field, Kate A., and Darimont, Chris T.
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Humans are perceived as predators by many species and may generate landscapes of fear, influencing spatiotemporal activity of wildlife. Additionally, wildlife might seek out human activity when faced with predation risks (human shield hypothesis). We used the anthropause, a decrease in human activity resulting from the COVID‐19 pandemic, to test ecology of fear and human shield hypotheses and quantify the effects of bear‐viewing ecotourism on grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) activity. We deployed camera traps in the Khutze watershed in Kitasoo Xai'xais Territory in the absence of humans in 2020 and with experimental treatments of variable human activity when ecotourism resumed in 2021. Daily bear detection rates decreased with more people present and increased with days since people were present. Human activity was also associated with more bear detections at forested sheltered sites and less at exposed sites, likely due to the influence of habitat on bear perception of safety. The number of people negatively influenced adult male detection rates, but we found no influence on female with young detections, providing no evidence that females responded behaviorally to a human shield effect from reduced male activity. We also observed apparent trade‐offs of risk avoidance and foraging. When salmon levels were moderate to high, detected bears were more likely to be females with young than adult males on days with more people present. Should managers want to minimize human impacts on bear activity and maintain baseline age–sex class composition at ecotourism sites, multiday closures and daily occupancy limits may be effective. More broadly, this work revealed that antipredator responses can vary with intensity of risk cues, habitat structure, and forage trade‐offs and manifest as altered age–sex class composition of individuals using human‐influenced areas, highlighting that wildlife avoid people across multiple spatiotemporal scales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Ecological amplitude and indication potential of mining bees (Andrena spp.): a case study from the post-agricultural area of the Kampinos National Park (Poland).
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Szczepko-Morawiec, Katarzyna, Wiśniowski, Bogdan, Motyka, Ewelina, Celary, Waldemar, and Kruk, Andrzej
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- *
ANIMAL diversity , *NATIONAL parks & reserves , *BIOSPHERE reserves , *BEES , *WILDLIFE conservation , *POLLINATORS - Abstract
The mining bee (Andrena spp.) play a key role in ensuring plant and animal diversity. The present study examines their diversity in a post-agricultural landscape exemplified by the Kampinos National Park (KNP), a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in Poland. The following hypotheses were addressed: (H1) the mining bees demonstrate a narrow ecological amplitude, (H2) there are no indicator species for particular habitats, and (H3) the studied mining bees have the same ecological preferences to those presented in the literature. A total of 40 catch per unit effort samples (CPUE) were collected across various habitats with different soil humidity. Forty-six species were recorded, representing 46% of mining bees and approximately 10% of the known Polish bee fauna. Nineteen of the recorded species (41%) were assigned to CR-NT threat categories, indicating that the national park plays a significant role in preserving mining bee species diversity and their conservation. None of the hypotheses (H1, H2, H3) were confirmed. The mining bees were found to demonstrate a wide ecological amplitude. Surprisingly, habitats located in dry and wet soils were both characterised by high abundance and species richness. Seventeen indicators were distinguished among the dominant and rarer species. Our findings suggest that Andrena nigroaenea and A. ventralis (lower humidity), as well as A. alfkenella and A. minutuloides (higher humidity), have different significant relationships with habitat soil humidity to those reported in the literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Audience segmentation approach to conservation messaging for transforming the exotic pet trade.
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Naito, Rumi, Chan, Kai M. A., López de la Lama, Rocío, and Zhao, Jiaying
- Abstract
Advancing transformative change for sustainability requires population‐wide behavior change. Yet, many behavioral interventions tackling environmental problems only examine average effects on the aggregate, overlooking the heterogeneous effects in a population. We developed and preregistered a novel audience segmentation approach to test the diverse impact of conservation messaging on reducing demand for exotic pets (private action ‐ i.e., desire to own exotic pets or visit wildlife entertainment places) and fostering citizen engagement for system‐wide change (civic action ‐ e.g., signing a petition or participating in a protest against the exotic pet trade). Through an online survey with US participants (
n = 2953), we identified 4 population segments (early adopters, early majority, late majority, and laggards), representing varying levels of commitment to wildlife conservation and then randomly assigned each segment to one of 3 messaging conditions. Messages highlighting negative consequences of the exotic pet trade and the power of collective action for system change effectively promoted private action among all segments except early adopters (η p2 = 0.005). Among civic actions, only the collective action message motivated early adopters and the early majority to sign petitions (φ C = 0.193 andφ C = 0.097, respectively). Furthermore, the 4 segments showed distinct reasoning for action and inaction on wildlife conservation, with certain relational values, such as care, serving as both motivations and barriers to action. These findings highlight the need for targeted behavioral interventions across diverse populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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33. Habitat preferences of European turtle dove Streptopelia turtur in the Czech Republic: implications for conservation of a rapidly declining farmland species.
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KOREJS, Kryštof, RIEGERT, Jan, MIKULÁŠ, Ivan, VRBA, Jan, and HAVLÍČEK, Jan
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- *
TURTLEDOVE , *HABITAT selection , *TURTLE populations , *FORESTS & forestry , *WILDLIFE conservation , *LAND cover , *URBAN plants - Abstract
The European turtle dove (Streptopelia turtur) is an endangered IUCN Red List species impacted by agricultural intensification. Although its population has declined, there is limited knowledge of its habitat preferences in Eastern European countries. To address this gap, we conducted a study in the Czech Republic to investigate the environmental factors that affect the distribution of turtle doves. We used turtle dove presence data from countrywide monitoring efforts, as well as environmental variable datasets describing all natural and human-modified ecosystems making up the land cover of the country. We analysed the general effects of land cover on turtle dove distribution using generalised mixed-effects models. We performed a compositional analysis of habitat use to investigate detailed habitat preferences. A higher proportion of urban and wetland land cover was associated with a significant decrease in turtle dove presence. In contrast, a higher proportion of agricultural and forest land cover was associated with the increased presence of turtle doves. In addition, the compositional analysis revealed significant differences between the suitability of individual habitat types within each land cover type. For example, turtle doves preferred coniferous tree plantations and semi-natural beech and riparian forests, but oak forests, broadleaf, and mixed tree plantations were strongly avoided. In agricultural areas, turtle doves strongly preferred semi-natural grasslands and vineyards but avoided intensive agriculture. Overall, our study provides important insights into the habitat preferences of the endangered turtle dove in the Czech Republic, which can better inform conservation efforts for the species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Implications of gene tree heterogeneity on downstream phylogenetic analyses: A case study employing the Fair Proportion index.
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Wicke, Kristina, Haque, Md. Rejuan, and Kubatko, Laura
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CONSCIOUSNESS raising , *WILDLIFE conservation , *HETEROGENEITY , *MOLECULAR phylogeny , *TREES , *PHYLOGENY - Abstract
Many questions in evolutionary biology require the specification of a phylogeny for downstream phylogenetic analyses. However, with the increasingly widespread availability of genomic data, phylogenetic studies are often confronted with conflicting signal in the form of genomic heterogeneity and incongruence between gene trees and the species tree. This raises the question of determining what data and phylogeny should be used in downstream analyses, and to what extent the choice of phylogeny (e.g., gene trees versus species trees) impacts the analyses and their outcomes. In this paper, we study this question in the realm of phylogenetic diversity indices, which provide ways to prioritize species for conservation based on their relative evolutionary isolation on a phylogeny, and are thus one example of downstream phylogenetic analyses. We use the Fair Proportion (FP) index, also known as the evolutionary distinctiveness score, and explore the variability in species rankings based on gene trees as compared to the species tree for several empirical data sets. Our results indicate that prioritization rankings among species vary greatly depending on the underlying phylogeny, suggesting that the choice of phylogeny is a major influence in assessing phylogenetic diversity in a conservation setting. While we use phylogenetic diversity conservation as an example, we suspect that other types of downstream phylogenetic analyses such as ancestral state reconstruction are similarly affected by genomic heterogeneity and incongruence. Our aim is thus to raise awareness of this issue and inspire new research on which evolutionary information (species trees, gene trees, or a combination of both) should form the basis for analyses in these settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. Combining environmental DNA and visual surveys can inform conservation planning for coral reefs.
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Muenzel, Dominic, Bani, Alessia, De Brauwer, Maarten, Stewart, Eleanor, Djakiman, Cilun, Halwi, Purnama, Yusuf, Syafyuddin, Santoso, Prakas, Hukom, Frensly D., Struebig, Matthew, Jompa, Jamaluddin, Limmon, Gino, Dumbrell, Alex, and Beger, Maria
- Subjects
- *
CORAL reef conservation , *CORAL reefs & islands , *WILDLIFE conservation , *CORALS , *OCEAN zoning - Abstract
Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding has the potential to revolutionize conservation planning by providing spatially and taxonomically comprehensive data on biodiversity and ecosystem conditions, but its utility to inform the design of protected areas remains untested. Here, we quantify whether and how identifying conservation priority areas within coral reef ecosystems differs when biodiversity information is collected via eDNA analyses or traditional visual census records. We focus on 147 coral reefs in Indonesia's hyper-diverse Wallacea region and show large discrepancies in the allocation and spatial design of conservation priority areas when coral reef species were surveyed with underwater visual techniques (fishes, corals, and algae) or eDNA metabarcoding (eukaryotes and metazoans). Specifically, incidental protection occurred for 55% of eDNA species when targets were set for species detected by visual surveys and 71% vice versa. This finding is supported by generally low overlap in detection between visual census and eDNA methods at species level, with more overlap at higher taxonomic ranks. Incomplete taxonomic reference databases for the highly diverse Wallacea reefs, and the complementary detection of species by the two methods, underscore the current need to combine different biodiversity data sources to maximize species representation in conservation planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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36. Engaging internal and external audiences to develop and promote zoo-based conservation efforts.
- Author
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Nageotte, Nichole L., Steele-Inama, Marley, Frederick, Brittany, Elvove, Erica, and McDonald, Shelby E.
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TRANSTHEORETICAL model of change , *WILDLIFE conservation , *HABITAT conservation , *HABITATS , *PERCEIVED benefit - Abstract
As place-based conservation organizations, zoos are in a central position to support individuals in making small changes in their lives that will support the protection of wildlife and their habitats. This paper describes the secondary analysis of data collected from multi-phase front-end, exploratory evaluation that informed the development of a conservation action campaign in association with a non-profit, urban zoo. In phase one, internal organization staff were invited to attend workshops during which they brainstormed potential conservation actions that they felt were important for the zoo to promote. They identified and ranked 164 unique actions. In phase two, the ranking was used to narrow down the 164 actions to 20 actions which were used to develop a survey administered to visitors who opted in to receiving online surveys from the zoo. The survey asked participants to state their interest in each of the 20 conservation actions. The Transtheoretical Model of Behavior Change informed the analysis of responses. Through this approach we identified actions that people were already doing, interested in doing, and not interested in doing. The responses from this survey were used to narrow down the list further to 10 actions used in a survey in phase three. This second survey administered to zoo visitors on grounds asked participants which of the 10 actions they would be most interested in doing, and the perceived barriers and benefits of doing them. This process allowed us to use evidence-based decision making to choose which conservation actions would resonate most with the community for our conservation action campaign. We also were able to identify values visitors held that might influence environmentally friendly behaviors. Visitors who responded to this survey tended to respond in ways that aligned with self-transcendent values. The research suggests that the campaign should focus on habitat restoration and remediation and purchasing wildlife friendly coffee and other products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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37. Avian Haemosporidian Infection in Wildlife Rehabilitation Centres of Portugal: Causes, Consequences, and Genetic Diversity.
- Author
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Cruz, João T., de Carvalho, Luís Madeira, Ferreira, Mariana Ribeiro, Nunes, Carolina, Casero, María, and Marzal, Alfonso
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- *
WILDLIFE rehabilitation , *REHABILITATION centers , *GENETIC variation , *AVIAN malaria , *WILDLIFE conservation , *AVIAN influenza A virus , *PLASMODIUM , *BIRD food - Abstract
Simple Summary: Over thirty percent of bird species are undergoing population declines and are threatened with extinction in Portugal. Several reasons have been proposed to explain this decrease, such as the impact of human activities on natural environments and pathogens affecting the health of wildlife, domestic animals, and humans. Wildlife rescue and rehabilitation centres play an essential role in the conservation of endangered species. Despite wildlife rehabilitation centres providing valuable information on disease prevalence and transmission, the information on haemosporidian infection is still very scarce for birds admitted in these centres. In this study, we discovered new malaria parasites in birds admitted to wildlife rehabilitation centres in Portugal. We also revealed infection in bird species that were previously unknown to be infected with malaria parasites. Birds admitted to rehabilitation due to debilitating disease were more frequently infected with malaria. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the malaria infection extends the required period for medical treatment in these birds, which imposes additional economic costs for the rehabilitation and reduces the survival probabilities of the bird. These findings stress the importance of the study of malaria parasites in wildlife rehabilitation centres, also helping to design protocols and interventions to preserve endangered species. In the last decade, over 40% of bird species in Europe have experienced poor and bad conservation status, with more than 30% of bird species in mainland Portugal threatened with extinction. Along with anthropogenic factors, parasites and pathogens such as avian haemosporidians have been suggested to be responsible for these avian population declines. Wildlife rehabilitation centres play an essential role in species conservation and preservation. Moreover, animals admitted for rehabilitation can provide valuable information regarding transmission and pathogenicity of many diseases that affect wild birds that are rarely sampled in nature. However, reports of haemosporidians in captive birds are still limited. Here, we explored the prevalence and genetic diversity of avian haemosporidians in 89 birds from 29 species admitted to rehabilitation centres in Portugal, showing an overall infection prevalence of 30.3%. The prevalence of infection was higher in Strigiformes and in birds admitted to rehabilitation centres due to debilitating diseases. Remarkably, 30% of the infected bird species have not been found to harbour malaria parasites in preceding studies. We detected 15 different haemosporidian lineages infecting a third of bird species sampled. Notably, 2 out of these 15 detected haemosporidian lineages have not been obtained previously in other studies. Furthermore, we also identified nine new host–parasite interactions representing new host records for these haemosporidian parasites. Finally, our results revealed that birds infected with haemosporidians require longer rehabilitation treatments, which increase the economic costs for rehabilitation and may impair their survival prospects. These findings emphasise the importance of integrating haemosporidian infection considerations into rehabilitation protocols, highlighting the challenges posed by these infections in avian conservation and rehabilitation, including economic and logistical demands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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38. Asiatic Black Bear–Human Conflict: A Case Study from Guthichaur Rural Municipality, Jumla, Nepal.
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Rawal, Akshay Kumar, Timilsina, Sachin, Gautam, Subash, Lamichhane, Saurav, and Adhikari, Hari
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ASIATIC black bear , *WILDLIFE conservation , *BLACK bear , *ELECTRIC fences , *WILDLIFE management , *PLANT protection - Abstract
Simple Summary: This research paper presents a comprehensive study of the patterns of conflicts between humans and Asiatic black bears (Ursus thibetanus) in the Guthichaur rural municipality, Jumla, Nepal. Through semi-structured interviews with villagers, focus group discussions, and key informant interviews, this study explores the extent of crop damage, livestock depredation, and human injuries caused by black bears from 2009 to 2019. It was found that crop damage was the most significant form of conflict, followed by livestock depredation and human casualties. This study identifies anthropogenic activities, such as human encroachment into bear habitats and agricultural practices near forests, as primary drivers of these conflicts. Importantly, this research proposes measures to mitigate these conflicts, including initiating compensation schemes for losses, establishing electric fences for crop protection, and launching educational programs. These recommendations, rooted in local practices and conservation efforts, show promise for managing conflicts in regions facing similar challenges with black bears. This paper fills a critical gap in understanding the dynamics of human–bear conflicts in Nepal, contributing valuable insights into wildlife management and conservation strategies. Its findings are significant for researchers, policymakers, and conservationists aiming to develop sustainable solutions for human–wildlife coexistence. Our study assessed patterns of Asiatic black bear (Ursus thibetanus)–human conflicts within the Guthichaur rural municipality, Jumla, Nepal. Through semi-structured interviews with villagers, focus group discussions (FGDs), and key informant interviews (KIIs), we gathered black bear–human conflict information from 2009 to 2019. We identified three primary types of black bear–human interactions: crop damage, livestock depredation, and human injuries. Of these, crop damage (77.03%) emerged as the most prevalent issue. Notably, peak occurrences were observed during autumn (September–October) typically between 9 PM and 3 AM. Livestock depredations were more frequent during nighttime in April–August, with cows/ox (70.12%) being the most depredated animal. Our data also revealed five recorded cases of black bear attacks on humans, which transpired from September to October, primarily in farmland areas in varying years. Despite a prevailing negative perception of bears, a notable level of support exists for their conservation efforts among local communities. Furthermore, these conflicts could be mitigated by reinforcing indigenous crop protection methods and implementing targeted mitigation strategies, as observed in other regions with successful black bear–human interaction management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
39. Beyond Tolerance: Mitigating Human–Wildlife Conflict with Hospitality.
- Author
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Serenari, Christopher
- Subjects
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BEHAVIOR modification , *HOSPITALITY , *WILDLIFE conservation , *HELPING behavior , *ANIMAL populations , *HUMAN-animal relationships - Abstract
Simple Summary: In search of an alternative standard for an increasingly divided world there has been a rise in scholarly interest in non-commodified hospitality to achieve sustainable human–human and human–Nature relations. Unlike tolerance, hospitality offers us the intellectual space required to rethink human–wildlife relations in a way that reverses the anthropocentric power dynamic undergirding tolerance and creates hospitable spaces for wild animals on a crowded planet. This conceptual scoping project engages a thorough critique of tolerance as a design principle within wildlife conservation governance, particularly human–wildlife conflict, and proposes a more durable human–wildlife coexistence arrangement underpinned by hospitality. Tolerance has become a central position in wildlife conservation thought, and a goal in and of itself. Appeals to tolerance are expected to grow as the planet becomes more crowded, species are lost, and habitat is degraded. The concept has been uncritically adopted in wildlife conservation to mitigate human–wildlife conflicts (HWCs). However, scholars have demonstrated that tolerance is burdened with limitations, paradoxes, and shortcomings. Thus, blind adherence to it is not expected to produce a coexistence design necessary to sustain wildlife populations in the long term. This paper is a conceptual scoping project that engages a summary and critique of tolerance as a design principle within wildlife conservation governance. After introducing a resultant theory of dysfunctional human–wildlife coexistence, a pathway toward hospitality as a social institution is outlined via several commitments societies can make to transition to an era of normalizing a process of sincere welcoming, care, and support. The transition from tolerance to hospitality will entail shifting responsibility to humans to modify their behavior to help keep wildlife invisible where it is essential, learning about what wildlife want and need, and ensuring wildlife is not injured for being themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Influence of temporary emigration on wood turtle (Glyptemys insculpta) detectability, with implications for abundance estimation.
- Author
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Beard, Allyson N., Brown, Donald J., Hileman, Eric T., Jones, Michael T., Staggs, Jena M., Moen, Ron A., Badje, Andrew F., and Lituma, Christopher M.
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- *
WOOD , *WILDLIFE conservation , *TURTLES , *TURTLE conservation , *TURTLE populations , *ESTIMATES - Abstract
Reliable population estimates are important for making informed management decisions about wildlife species. Standardized survey protocols have been developed for monitoring population trends of the wood turtle (Glyptemys insculpta), a semi-aquatic freshwater turtle species of conservation concern throughout its distribution in east-central North America. The protocols use repeated active search surveys of defined areas, allowing for estimation of survey-specific detection probability (p) and site-specific abundance. These protocols assume population closure within the survey area during the survey period, which is unlikely to be met as wood turtles are a highly mobile species. Additionally, current protocols use a single-pass design that does not allow for separation of availability (pa) and detectability (pd). If there are systematic influences on pa or pd that are not accounted for in the survey design or data analysis, then resulting abundance estimates could be biased. The objectives of this study were to determine if pa is a random process and if pa and pd are influenced by demographic characteristics. We modified the wood turtle survey protocol used in the upper Midwest to include a double-pass design, allowing us to estimate pa and pd using a robust design capture-recapture model. The modified protocol was implemented at 14 wood turtle monitoring sites in Minnesota and Wisconsin between 2017 and 2022. Our results indicated that pa was non-random and that pd increased with turtle carapace length. Our study suggests that model assumptions for current wood turtle population models may be violated, likely resulting in an overestimation of abundance. We discuss possible protocol and modeling modifications that could result in more accurate wood turtle abundance estimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. A Palearctic view of a bat fungal disease.
- Author
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Whiting‐Fawcett, F., Blomberg, A. S., Troitsky, T., Meierhofer, M. B., Field, K. A., Puechmaille, S. J., and Lilley, T. M.
- Abstract
The fungal infection causing white‐nose disease in hibernating bats in North America has resulted in dramatic population declines of affected species, since the introduction of the causative agent
Pseudogymnoascus destructans . The fungus is native to the Palearctic, where it also infects several bat species, yet rarely causes severe pathology or the death of the host.Pseudogymnoascus destructans infects bats during hibernation by invading and digesting the skin tissue, resulting in the disruption of torpor patterns and consequent emaciation. Relations among pathogen, host, and environment are complex, and individuals, populations, and species respond to the fungal pathogen in different ways. For example, the NearcticMyotis lucifugus responds to infection by mounting a robust immune response, leading to immunopathology often contributing to mortality. In contrast, the PalearcticM. myotis shows no significant immunological response to infection. This lack of a strong response, resulting from the long coevolution between the hosts and the pathogen in the pathogen's native range, likely contributes to survival in tolerant species. After more than 15 years since the initial introduction of the fungus to North America, some of the affected populations are showing signs of recovery, suggesting that the fungus, hosts, or both are undergoing processes that may eventually lead to coexistence. The suggested or implemented management methods of the disease in North America have encompassed, for example, the use of probiotics and fungicides, vaccinations, and modifying the environmental conditions of the hibernation sites to limit the growth of the pathogen, intensity of infection, or the hosts’ responses to it. Based on current knowledge from Eurasia, policy makers and conservation managers should refrain from disrupting the ongoing evolutionary processes and adopt a holistic approach to managing the epizootic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Performance of different automatic photographic identification software for larvae and adults of the European fire salamander.
- Author
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Schulte, Laura, Faul, Charlotte, Oswald, Pia, Preißler, Kathleen, Steinfartz, Sebastian, Veith, Michael, and Caspers, Barbara A.
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AUTOMATIC identification , *SALAMANDERS , *AMPHIBIAN declines , *WILDLIFE conservation , *ADULTS , *IDENTIFICATION - Abstract
For many species, population sizes are unknown despite their importance for conservation. For population size estimation, capture-mark-recapture (CMR) studies are often used, which include the necessity to identify each individual, mostly through individual markings or genetic characters. Invasive marking techniques, however, can negatively affect the individual fitness. Alternatives are low-impact techniques such as the use of photos for individual identification, for species with stable distinctive phenotypic traits. For the individual identification of photos, a variety of different software, with different requirements, is available. The European fire salamander (Salamandra salamandra) is a species in which individuals, both at the larval stage and as adults, have individual specific patterns that allow for individual identification. In this study, we compared the performance of five different software for the use of photographic identification for the European fire salamander: Amphibian & Reptile Wildbook (ARW), AmphIdent, I3S pattern+, ManderMatcher and Wild-ID. While adults can be identified by all five software, European fire salamander larvae can currently only be identified by two of the five (ARW and Wild-ID). We used one dataset of European fire salamander larval pictures taken in the laboratory and tested this dataset in two of the five software (ARW and Wild-ID). We used another dataset of European fire salamander adult pictures taken in the field and tested this using all five software. We compared the requirements of all software on the pictures used and calculated the False Rejection Rate (FRR) and the Recognition Rate (RR). For the larval dataset (421 pictures) we found that the ARW and Wild-ID performed equally well for individual identification (99.6% and 100% Recognition Rate, respectively). For the adult dataset (377 pictures), we found the best False Rejection Rate in ManderMatcher and the highest Recognition Rate in the ARW. Additionally, the ARW is the only program that requires no image pre-processing. In times of amphibian declines, non-invasive photo identification software allowing capture-mark-recapture studies help to gain knowledge on population sizes, distribution, movement and demography of a population and can thus help to support species conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Red fox trap success is correlated with piping plover chick survival.
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PIPING plover , *RED fox , *WILDLIFE conservation , *SHORE birds , *PLOVERS , *CHICKS , *RACCOON - Abstract
Predation management is an important component of managing species of conservation concern. The piping plover (Charadrius melodus; plover), a disturbance-dependent and conservation-reliant shorebird that nests on sandy beaches and barrier islands on the Atlantic Coast, was listed under the United States Endangered Species Act in 1986, with habitat loss and predation stated as key causes of its decline. We evaluated the relationship between a suite of predators and plover chick survival from 2015-2018. We used a camera grid to establish indices of the abundance of 3 known chick predators: red fox (Vulpes vulpes), raccoon (Procyon lotor), and domestic cat. We used camera detections in a survival model to assess potential relationships between predator species detection and plover chick survival. Plover chick survival was negatively related with red fox detection, but not with detection of the other 2 predators. In addition to the correlation with red fox detections, chick survival was negatively related to high plover nesting density. Our results suggest that red foxes were predators of piping plover chicks during our study, likely augmented by other density-dependent sources of mortality. Targeted predator management could aid in conservation of piping plovers in this system as a short-term solution, but long-term recovery plans must also address habitat limitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. War on Extinction: Wildlife as Statecraft in Interwar Poland.
- Author
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SZCZYGIELSKA, MARIANNA
- Subjects
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WAR , *WILDLIFE conservation , *WILD horses , *INTERWAR Period (1918-1939) , *ZOOS - Abstract
Situated efforts to combat species extinction mobilize a network of institutional and logistical interventions, as well as politicized ideas about indigeneity and belonging. This article maps out the knowledge exchange and circulation of animal bodies between the Zoological Garden in Poznań and the forest reserve in Białowieża during the interwar period in Poland as part of the state-building project. A focus on the reintroduction of the wisent (Bison bonasus) and the back-breeding of the tarpan wild horse (Equus ferus ferus) exposes the biopolitical logistics of infrastructuring wildlife in the age of nationalism. Through these two breeding projects, animal bodies emerge at the interface between zoological and war logistics, demonstrating how biological life becomes the target of military intervention via species conservation. Looking closely at the efforts to restore the populations of extinct and extant representatives of local megafauna, this article highlights the renewed interest in native species as an accessible resource for recrafting institutional and national identities. By analyzing the logistical strategies of a marginal zoological collection in relation to a nature reserve in the last primeval forest of Europe, it traces how these strategies impacted both local and global scientific research and its popularization. Not only does such a shared institutional history reveal the itineraries of knowledge production but also the ways in which war has shaped nature management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Checklist of the flora in the Rusenski Lom River Valley (Northeast Bulgaria).
- Author
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Stoyanov, Stoyan and Apostolova-Stoyanova, Nadejda
- Subjects
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BOTANY , *ENDEMIC species , *WILDLIFE conservation - Abstract
An updated checklist numbering 1076 vascular plants is presented here, based on the progress in the floristic research over the past 20 years. Data on endemic species and species of conservation concern in the Rusenski Lom Valley is also presented. The first checklist of the Rusenski Lom River Valley's vascular flora, published in 2005, included 877 species. In the subsequent years, taxonomy and nomenclature of the taxa were continuously updated, which led to the enrichment of the list with about 200 new species records. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. My Own Private Library.
- Author
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Bowers, Catherine
- Subjects
- *
PERSONAL libraries , *COLLECTION development in libraries , *ANTHROPOLOGICAL linguistics , *IRISH literature , *WILDLIFE conservation ,IRISH history - Abstract
The article explores author's personal collection, reflecting on the gaps shaped by her librarian role and life experiences. Topics include the evolution of her Ireland-focused collection, linguistic anthropology's influence, and insights into Irish culture, landscapes, and wildlife through literature and experiences.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. How do landscape and life history traits contribute to the threat context of Brazilian primates?
- Author
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Matte, A. L. L., Buss, G., Fialho, M., Becker, F. G., Jerusalinsky, L., de Lacerda, J. C., Santos, P. J. P., and Bezerra, B.
- Subjects
- *
LIFE history theory , *WILDLIFE conservation , *PRIMATES , *ENDANGERED species , *BIOMES , *LANDSCAPES , *INDIGENOUS children - Abstract
Brazilian primates differ regarding landscape characteristics within their ranges (e.g. habitat availability) and life‐history traits (e.g. body size). These landscape and life history attributes may be related to extinction risk. Here, we verified how such attributes correlate with primate threat categories. We considered 124 Brazilian primates based on the 2014 Brazilian list of threatened (Critically Endangered, Endangered and Vulnerable) and non‐threatened (Least Concern and Near Threatened) species. We then characterized their landscape (i.e. habitat availability, habitat loss and fragmentation, indigenous lands, roads, urban areas, deforestation arch) and life‐history attributes (i.e. body weight, gestation length and generation time), which together make up the threat context for each threat category. We compared threat categories to identify differences in such attributes, considering biome (Atlantic Forest, Amazon, Caatinga and Cerrado) as a factor and testing for phylogenetic effect. We investigated the attributes responsible for group characterization for specific threats and binary threatened/non‐threatened categories. We show that life history and landscape attributes differ in the biomes. However, only landscape features varied across biomes. In the Amazon, the threatened categories reached the highest level of habitat loss in the last 30 years, while in the Atlantic Forest, the landscape of threatened species had the highest proportions of roads and urban areas. Most threatened species landscapes in the Caatinga and Cerrado were highly fragmented. We found a positive link between human impacts and extinction risk in the Amazon. In the other biomes, anthropogenic landscape characteristics were associated with threatened and non‐threatened species. Threatened species tended to have large bodies and a slow life history, regardless of the biome. The more closely related the species, the more similar the traits. We suggest considering biomes and threat categories together with specific landscape and life history attributes to distinguish primate threat context for species conservation priority‐setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Beyond overlap: considering habitat preference and fitness outcomes in the umbrella species concept.
- Author
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Carlisle, J. D., Smith, K. T., Beck, J. L., Murphy, M. A., and Chalfoun, A. D.
- Subjects
- *
KEYSTONE species , *WILDLIFE conservation , *SAGE grouse , *BIRD nests , *SPECIES diversity , *HABITAT selection , *MACHINE learning - Abstract
Umbrella species and other surrogate species approaches to conservation provide an appealing framework to extend the reach of conservation efforts beyond single species. For the umbrella species concept to be effective, populations of multiple species of concern must persist in areas protected on behalf of the umbrella species. Most assessments of the concept, however, focus exclusively on geographic overlap among umbrella and background species, and not measures that affect population persistence (e.g. habitat quality or fitness). We quantified the congruence between the habitat preferences and nesting success of a high‐profile umbrella species (greater sage‐grouse, Centrocercus urophasianus, hereafter 'sage‐grouse'), and three sympatric species of declining songbirds (Brewer's sparrow Spizella breweri, sage thrasher Oreoscoptes montanus and vesper sparrow Pooecetes gramineus) in central Wyoming, USA during 2012–2013. We used machine‐learning methods to create data‐driven predictions of sage‐grouse nest‐site selection and nest survival probabilities by modeling field‐collected sage‐grouse data relative to habitat attributes. We then used field‐collected songbird data to assess whether high‐quality sites for songbirds aligned with those of sage‐grouse. Nest sites selected by songbirds did not coincide with sage‐grouse nesting preferences, with the exception that Brewer's sparrows preferred similar nest sites to sage‐grouse in 2012. Moreover, the areas that produced higher rates of songbird nest survival were unrelated to those for sage‐grouse. Our findings suggest that management actions at local scales that prioritize sage‐grouse nesting habitat will not necessarily enhance the reproductive success of sagebrush‐associated songbirds. Measures implemented to conserve sage‐grouse and other purported umbrella species at broad spatial scales likely overlap the distribution of many species, however, broad‐scale overlap may not translate to fine‐scale conservation benefit beyond the umbrella species itself. The maintenance of microhabitat heterogeneity important for a diversity of species of concern will be critical for a more holistic application of the umbrella species concept. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Balancing conservation and welfare in ex situ management of the extinct‐in‐the‐wild sihek: sex‐ and age‐specific causes of mortality and contributions to population growth rate.
- Author
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Trask, A. E., Carraro, C., Kock, R., McCrea, R., Newland, S., Royer, E., Medina, S., Fontenot, D., and Ewen, J. G.
- Subjects
- *
MORTALITY , *ENDANGERED species , *ANIMAL welfare , *DEATH rate , *WILDLIFE conservation - Abstract
Ex situ threatened species management has both conservation and welfare objectives and these objectives often align, but can diverge. Areas of agreement can present win‐wins for achieving welfare and conservation objectives, while identifying areas of divergence is important to ensure management strategies achieve balance across objectives. We examined welfare and conservation objectives in the ex situ population of Extinct in the Wild sihek (Guam kingfisher, Todiramphus cinnamominus) by quantifying mortality rates, determining sex‐ and age‐specific causes of mortality and identifying associated welfare domains, as well as quantifying sex‐ and age‐specific differences in reproductive value and contributions to variation in population growth rate (λ). Females had significantly higher mortality rates than males, potentially impacting population viability and suggesting females may be more vulnerable to experiencing lower welfare than males. Mitigating causes of female mortality would therefore present a clear win‐win for both welfare and conservation objectives. Both causes of mortality and contributions to variation in λ were found to differ across sex‐ and age‐classes. In particular, nutritional and metabolic diseases tended to impact younger age‐classes and these age‐classes had large contributions to variation in λ. Mitigation of these diseases could therefore also present a win‐win for welfare and conservation objectives. However, we also identified a potential divergence between objectives: a major cause of female mortality was reproductive disease with older aged females primarily affected, but older aged females contributed little to variation in λ and had low reproductive value. Developing mitigation strategies for reproductive disease could therefore aid welfare objectives but have little benefit for conservation objectives, suggesting careful balancing across objectives is required. Our results highlight the need to explicitly consider conservation and welfare objectives in threatened species management, in particular in the context of an increasing conservation need for ex situ population management, coupled with increasing social concern for animal welfare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Combining species distribution models and moderate resolution satellite information to guide conservation programs for reticulated giraffe.
- Author
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Crego, R. D., Fennessy, J., Brown, M. B., Connette, G., Stacy‐Dawes, J., Masiaine, S., and Stabach, J. A.
- Subjects
- *
SPECIES distribution , *WILDLIFE reintroduction , *SYNTHETIC aperture radar , *ENDANGERED species , *GIRAFFES , *WILDLIFE conservation , *WEB-based user interfaces - Abstract
The conservation of threatened and rare species in remote areas often presents two challenges: there may be unknown populations that have not yet been documented and there is a need to identify suitable habitat to translocate individuals and help populations recover. This is the case of the reticulated giraffe (Giraffa reticulata), a species of high conservation priority for which: (a) there may be unknown populations in remote areas, and (b) detailed maps of suitable habitat available within its range are lacking. We implemented a species distribution modeling (SDM) workflow in Google Earth Engine, combining GPS telemetry data of 31 reticulated giraffe with Landsat 8 OLI, Advanced Land Observing Satellite Phased Arrayed L‐band Synthetic Aperture Radar, and surface ruggedness layers to predict suitable habitat at 30‐m spatial resolution across the potential range of the species. Models had high predictive power, with a mean AUC‐PR of 0.88 (SD: 0.02; range: 0.86–0.91), mean sensitivity of 0.85 (SD: 0.04; range: 0.80–0.91), and mean precision was 0.81 (SD: 0.02; range: 0.79–0.83). Model predictions were also consistent with two independent validation datasets, with higher predicted suitable habitat values at known occurrence locations than at a random set of locations (P < 0.01). Our model predicted a total of 5519 km2 of potentially suitable habitat in Kenya, 963 km2 in Ethiopia, and 147 km2 in Somalia. Our results indicate that is possible to combine moderate spatial resolution imagery with telemetry data to guide conservation programs of threatened terrestrial species. We provide a free web app where managers can visualize and interact with the 30 m resolution map to help guide future surveys to search for existing populations and to inform future reintroduction assessments. We present all analysis code as a framework that could be adapted for other species across the globe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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