journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38417451/human-access-constrains-optimal-foraging-and-habitat-availability-in-an-avian-generalist
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicholas M Masto, Abigail G Blake-Bradshaw, Cory J Highway, Allison C Keever, Jamie C Feddersen, Heath M Hagy, Bradley S Cohen
Animals balance costs of antipredator behaviors with resource acquisition to minimize hunting and other mortality risks and maximize their physiological condition. This inherent trade-off between forage abundance, its quality, and mortality risk is intensified in human-dominated landscapes because fragmentation, habitat loss, and degradation of natural vegetation communities is often coupled with artificially enhanced vegetation (i.e., food plots), creating high-risk, high-reward resource selection decisions...
February 28, 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38404050/natural-vegetation-biomass-and-the-dimension-of-forest-quality-in-tropical-agricultural-landscapes
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Renato Miazaki de Toledo, Vania Regina Pivello, Michael Philip Perring, Luciano Martins Verdade
Forest cover has been a pivotal indicator of biological conservation and carrying capacity for wildlife in forest ecoregions. Such a relationship underpins policies focused on the extension of protected lands. Here, we estimate aboveground biomass (AGB) as a proxy for habitat quality in seminatural rural patches and provide a comparison with approaches that only consider forest cover. We hypothesize that recommendations for biological conservation in agricultural landscapes are substantially improved if habitat quality is also taken into account, and thus consider the possibility of forest quality being modulated by land-use amount, type, and age...
February 25, 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38379458/the-long-shadow-of-woody-encroachment-an-integrated-approach-to-modeling-grassland-songbird-habitat
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katy M Silber, Trevor J Hefley, Henry N Castro-Miller, Zak Ratajczak, W Alice Boyle
Animals must track resources over relatively fine spatial and temporal scales, particularly in disturbance-mediated systems like grasslands. Grassland birds respond to habitat heterogeneity by dispersing among sites within and between years, yet we know little about how they make post-dispersal settlement decisions. Many methods exist to quantify the resource selection of mobile taxa, but the habitat data used in these models are frequently not collected at the same location or time that individuals were present...
February 21, 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38379442/a-meta-analysis-reveals-increases-in-soil-organic-carbon-following-the-restoration-and-recovery-of-croplands-in-southwest-china
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zihao Guo, Shuting Zhang, Lichen Zhang, Yangzhou Xiang, Jianping Wu
In China, the Grain for Green Program (GGP) is an ambitious project to convert croplands into natural vegetation, but exactly how changes in vegetation translate into changes in soil organic carbon remains less clear. Here we conducted a meta-analysis using 734 observations to explore the effects of land recovery on soil organic carbon and nutrients in four provinces in Southwest China. Following GGP, the soil organic carbon content (SOCc) and soil organic carbon stock (SOCs) increased by 33.73% and 22.39%, respectively, compared with the surrounding croplands...
February 21, 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38379349/optimal-allocation-of-resources-among-general-and-species-specific-tools-for-plant-pest-biosecurity-surveillance
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hoa-Thi-Minh Nguyen, Long Chu, Andrew M Liebhold, Rebecca Epanchin-Niell, John M Kean, Tom Kompas, Andrew P Robinson, Eckehard G Brockerhoff, Joslin L Moore
This paper proposes a surveillance model for plant pests that can optimally allocate resources among survey tools with varying properties. While some survey tools are highly specific for the detection of a single pest species, others are more generalized. There is considerable variation in the cost and sensitivity of these tools, but there are no guidelines or frameworks for identifying which tools are most cost-effective when used in surveillance programs that target the detection of newly invaded populations...
February 20, 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38357775/distinct-latitudinal-patterns-and-drivers-of-topsoil-nitrogen-and-phosphorus-across-urban-forests-in-eastern-china
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nan Xia, Enzai Du, Xinhui Wu, Yang Tang, Hongbo Guo, Yang Wang
Nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) are the two most important macronutrients supporting forest growth. Unprecedented urbanization has created growing areas of urban forests that provide key ecosystem services for city dwellers. However, the large-scale patterns of soil N and P content remain poorly understood in urban forests. Based on a systematic soil survey in urban forests from nine large cities across eastern China, we examined the spatial patterns and key drivers of topsoil (0-20 cm) total N content, total P content, and N:P ratio...
February 15, 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38351586/sustaining-eastern-oak-forests-synergistic-effects-of-fire-and-topography-on-vegetation-and-fuels
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Todd F Hutchinson, Bryce T Adams, Matthew B Dickinson, Maryjane Heckel, Alejandro A Royo, Melissa A Thomas-Van Gundy
Across much of the eastern United States, oak forests are undergoing mesophication as shade-tolerant competitors become more abundant and suppress oak regeneration. Given the historical role of anthropogenic surface fires in promoting oak dominance, prescribed fire has become important in efforts to reverse mesophication and sustain oaks. In 2000 we established the Ohio Hills Fire and Fire Surrogate (FFS) study to examine whether repeated prescribed fire (Fire), mechanical partial harvest (Mech), and their combined application (Mech + Fire) reduced the dominance of subcanopy mesophytic competitors, increased the abundance of large oak-hickory advance regeneration, created a more diverse and productive ground-layer flora, and produced fuel beds more conducive to prescribed fire, reducing the risk of high-severity wildfire...
February 13, 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38305124/temporal-dynamics-in-the-composition-of-bird-communities-along-a-gradient-of-farmland-restoration
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Angie Haslem, Rohan H Clarke, Alex C Maisey, Alistair Stewart, James Q Radford, Andrew F Bennett
Revegetation plantings are a key activity in farmland restoration and are commonly assumed to support biotic communities that, with time, replicate those of reference habitats. Restoration outcomes, however, can be highly variable and difficult to predict; hence there is value in quantifying restoration success to improve future efforts. We test the expectation that, over time, revegetation will restore bird communities to match those in reference habitats; and assess whether specific planting attributes enhance restoration success...
February 2, 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303165/concurrent-threats-and-extinction-risk-in-a-long-lived-highly-fecund-vertebrate-with-parental-care
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
George C Brooks, William A Hopkins, Holly K Kindsvater
Detecting declines and quantifying extinction risk of long-lived, highly fecund vertebrates, including fishes, reptiles, and amphibians, can be challenging. In addition to the false notion that large clutches always buffer against population declines, the imperiled status of long-lived species can often be masked by extinction debt, wherein adults persist on the landscape for several years after populations cease to be viable. Here we develop a demographic model for the eastern hellbender (Cryptobranchus alleganiensis), an imperiled aquatic salamander with paternal care...
February 1, 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38286682/wetlands-as-a-potential-multifunctioning-tool-to-mitigate-eutrophication-and-brownification
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna Borgström, Lars-Anders Hansson, Clemens Klante, Johanna Sjöstedt
Eutrophication and brownification are ongoing environmental problems affecting aquatic ecosystems. Due to anthropogenic changes, increasing amounts of organic and inorganic compounds are entering aquatic systems from surrounding catchment areas, increasing both nutrients, total organic carbon (TOC), and water color with societal, as well as ecological consequences. Several studies have focused on the ability of wetlands to reduce nutrients, whereas data on their potential to reduce TOC and water color are scarce...
January 29, 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38212051/long-term-efficacy-of-fuel-reduction-and-restoration-treatments-in-northern-rockies-dry-forests
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sharon M Hood, Justin S Crotteau, Cory C Cleveland
Fuel and restoration treatments seeking to mitigate the likelihood of uncharacteristic high-severity wildfires in forests with historically frequent, low-severity fire regimes are increasingly common, but long-term treatment effects on fuels, aboveground carbon, plant community structure, ecosystem resilience, and other ecosystem attributes are understudied. We present 20-year responses to thinning and prescribed burning treatments commonly used in dry, low-elevation forests of the western United States from a long-term study site in the Northern Rockies that is part of the National Fire and Fire Surrogate Study...
January 11, 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38185514/ecologically-informed-priors-improve-bayesian-model-estimates-of-species-richness-and-occupancy-for-undetected-species
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily M Beasley
Detection error can bias observations of ecological processes, especially when some species are never detected during sampling. In many communities, the probable identity of these missing species is known from previous research and natural history collections, but this information is rarely incorporated into subsequent models. Here, I present prior aggregation as a method for including information from external sources in Bayesian hierarchical detection models. Prior aggregation combines information from multiple prior distributions, in this case, an ecologically informative, species-level prior, and an uninformative community-level prior...
January 7, 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38168891/the-following-article-for-this-special-feature-was-published-in-an-earlier-issue
#33
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
January 2024: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38071739/microgeographic-variation-in-demography-and-thermal-regimes-stabilize-regional-abundance-of-a-widespread-freshwater-fish
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brian K Gallagher, Dylan J Fraser
Predicting the persistence of species under climate change is an increasingly important objective in ecological research and management. However, biotic and abiotic heterogeneity can drive asynchrony in population responses at small spatial scales, complicating species-level assessments. For widely distributed species consisting of many fragmented populations, such as brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis), understanding drivers of asynchrony in population dynamics can improve predictions of range-wide climate impacts...
December 10, 2023: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38071736/natural-habitat-connectivity-and-organic-management-modulate-pest-dispersal-gene-flow-and-natural-enemy-communities
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Danyelle R Novaes, Patricia S Sujii, Camila A Rodrigues, Karen M N B Silva, Amanda F P Machado, Alice K Inoue-Nagata, Erich Y T Nakasu, Pedro H B Togni
The simplification and fragmentation of agricultural landscapes generate effects on insects at multiple spatial scales. As each functional group perceives and uses the habitat differently, the response of pest insects and their associated natural enemies to environmental changes varies. Therefore, landscape structure may have consequences on gene flow among pest populations in space. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of local and landscape factors, at multiple scales, on the local infestation, gene flow and broad dispersion dynamics of the pest insect Bemisia tabaci (Genn...
December 10, 2023: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38071730/facilitating-the-recovery-of-insect-communities-in-restored-streams-by-increasing-oviposition-habitat
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samantha Dilworth, Brad W Taylor
Recruitment limitation is known to influence species abundances and distributions. Recognition of how and why it occurs both in natural and in designed environments could improve restoration. Aquatic insects, for instance, rarely re-establish in restored streams to levels comparable to reference streams even years post restoration. We experimentally increased oviposition habitat in five out of ten restored streams in western North Carolina to test whether insect egg laying habitat was limiting insect populations in restored streams...
December 10, 2023: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38071699/wildflower-plantings-enhance-nesting-opportunities-for-soil-nesting-bees
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Neal M Williams, Andrew Buderi, Logan Rowe, Kimiora Ward
Ongoing declines of bees and other pollinators are driven in part by the loss of critical floral resources and nesting substrates. Most conservation/restoration efforts for bees aim to enhance floral abundance and continuity but often assume the same actions will bolster nesting opportunities. Recent research suggests that habitat plantings may not always provide both forage and nesting resources. We evaluated wildflower plantings designed to augment floral resources to determine their ability to enhance nesting by soil-nesting bees over three study years in Northern California agricultural landscapes...
December 10, 2023: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38071696/thresholds-and-alternative-states-in-a-neotropical-dry-forest-in-response-to-fire-severity
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
H Raúl Peinetti, Brandon T Bestelmeyer, Claudia C Chirino, Florencia L Vivalda, Alicia G Kin
Neotropical xerophytic forest ecosystems evolved with fires that shaped their resilience to disturbance events. However, it is unknown whether forest resilience to fires persists under a new fire regime influenced by anthropogenic disturbance and climate change. We asked if there is evidence for a fire severity threshold causing an abrupt transition from a forest to an alternative shrub thicket state in the presence of typical post-fire management. We studied a heterogeneous wildfire event to assess medium-term effects (11 years) of varying fire severity in a xerophytic Caldén forest in central Argentina...
December 10, 2023: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38071693/mapping-multiscale-breeding-bird-species-distributions-across-the-united-states-and-evaluating-their-conservation-applications
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kathleen A Carroll, Anna M Pidgeon, Paul R Elsen, Laura S Farwell, David Gudex-Cross, Benjamin Zuckerberg, Volker C Radeloff
Species distribution models are vital to management decisions that require understanding habitat use patterns, particularly for species of conservation concern. However, the production of distribution maps for individual species is often hampered by data scarcity, and existing species maps are rarely spatially validated due to limited occurrence data. Furthermore, community-level maps based on stacked species distribution models lack important community assemblage information (e.g., competitive exclusion) relevant to conservation...
December 10, 2023: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37983735/bird-species-responses-to-rangeland-management-in-relation-to-their-traits-rio-de-la-plata-grasslands-as-a-case-study
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joaquín Aldabe, Teresa Morán López, Pablo Soca, Oscar Blumetto, Juan Manuel Morales
Areas used for livestock production and dominated by native grasses represent a unique opportunity to reconcile biodiversity conservation and livestock production. However, limited knowledge on individual species responses to rangeland management restricts our capacity to design grazing practices that favor endangered species and other priority birds. In this work, we applied Hierarchical Modeling of Species Communities (HMSC) to study individual species responses, as well as the influence of traits on such responses, to variables related to rangeland management using birds of the Rio de la Plata Grasslands as a case study...
November 20, 2023: Ecological Applications
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