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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
41

TERRITORIAL ESTABLISHMENT BY BLACK-THROATED SPARROWS IN SOUTH-CENTRAL ARIZONA.

Torres, Steven Gerard. January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
42

Breeding Ecology of Noethern Pintails in Prairie Landscapes: Tests of Habitat Selection and Reproductive Trade-Off Models

2011 November 1900 (has links)
Ecologists and conservation biologists are interested in explaining why animal abundance and reproductive success vary among habitats. Initial motivation for this research arose from concerns for Northern Pintail (Anas acuta) populations in North America. Unlike many prairie-nesting dabbling duck populations, pintails failed to increase during periods of excellent wetland conditions, and remained below conservation goals. Low pintail populations have been linked to degraded landscape conditions on the Canadian prairies. Current habitat management for pintails aims to protect and create larger areas of perennial cover either by encouraging better management of grazing lands, by converting cropland to grassland, or by promoting adoption of fall-seeded crops like winter wheat. The central premise is that larger areas of natural grassland cover will attract breeding pintails to nest earlier in the season in low-predation-risk habitat. I studied pintail nesting ecology near the Milk River Ridge, Alberta, 2004-2006, in terms of a life-cycle perspective, from spring arrival and settling on breeding areas, to assess age and quality of nesting females, to determine timing and investment in reproduction, and finally to measure nesting success. A gradient in presumed high (grassland) to low (agriculture) habitat quality provided a landscape template for testing habitat selection models. Pintail breeding pair densities were 1.5-3 times higher in grassland than agricultural landscapes in all three years, regardless of regional population size, with pairs occupying grassland landscapes at higher densities immediately upon arrival in early spring. Northern Shoveler (A. clypeata), gadwall (A. strepera) and blue-wing teal (A. discors) had similar settlement patterns as pintails, but mallard (A. platyrhynchos) pair density was higher in agricultural areas. Relatively more, older female pintails were captured at nests in grassland landscapes whereas yearling females were encountered more often in agricultural areas, a pattern that was not detected in female shovelers. This response suggests that older female pintails may be better able to recognize and settle in higher quality grassland habitats. Body mass of pintail females did not vary among years, decreased seasonally, and was positively related to body size index and incubation stage. Furthermore, pintail body mass did not differ between grassland (650 ± 24 g), ecotone (678 ± 27 g) and agriculture (672 ± 33 g). In female shovelers, body mass varied among years (555 ± 29 g in 2004, 481 ± 18 g in 2005, 508 ± 21 g in 2006), and increased with nesting date. Shoveler body mass did not differ between grassland (519 ± 32 g), ecotone (519 ± 44 g), or agriculture (507 ± 35 g). Nest initiation dates did not vary by landscape for pintail, shoveler or mallard, but all species nested earlier in 2006 versus 2004. In pintail, shoveler and mallard, clutch size was negatively related to nest initiation date. Pintail and shoveler clutch sizes were generally larger in a wet year with abundant wetlands (2006) when compared with a dry year (2004), but no landscape differences were detected. Mallard clutch size did not vary by year or landscape. Female reproductive timing and investment (in terms of clutch size) were unrelated to upland habitat characteristics, counter to a hypothesis that predicts larger pintail clutch sizes in agricultural landscapes. However, pintail and shoveler invested in larger clutches in 2006, a wet year with abundant wetlands, possibly due to greater abundance of aquatic foods. Finally, nest survival rates of duck species, except mallard, tended to be higher in grassland landscapes and lower in agricultural landscapes. Pintail nest survival was consistently higher in grassland than in agricultural landscapes and was highest in 2006 when wetland conditions were excellent. Shoveler and blue-winged teal nest survival rates did not vary strongly with landscape, but were also higher in 2006, whereas mallard and gadwall nest survival estimates did not vary with landscape or year. Overall, pintails settled at higher densities in grassland landscapes where breeding success was higher (indexed by nesting success). This suggests that pintails respond appropriately to cues that enable them to recognize suitable habitat, at least in regions where large contiguous areas of grassland habitat remain. Furthermore, assuming that findings for pintails reflect those of other grassland bird species, large remnant areas of intact natural grassland seem particularly in need of protection or restoration, and management regimes that maintain their habitat integrity. By integrating applied and theoretical aspects of pintail reproductive ecology, I attempted to provide deeper insights into the processes that could shape behavioral decisions by breeding pintails and other duck species. Older pintails may occupy wetlands in higher quality grassland habitat early in spring, forcing subordinate or later-arriving individuals into poorer quality habitat (i.e., where nesting success is lower); however, mechanisms involved in this putative process are unknown. Overall, results suggest that grassland restoration or enhancement (e.g., managing grazing intensity) could improve reproductive success of pintails and possibly other grassland bird species.
43

Tamanho populacional, razão sexual e uso do habitat por uma população de mutum-do-sudeste (Crax blumenbachii Spix, 1825) reintroduzida em Ipaba, MG / Population size, sex ratio and habitat use of a Red-billed Curassow (Crax blumenbachii Spix, 1825) population reintroduced in Ipaba, MG, Brazil

Araujo, Joana Carvalhaes Borba de 25 September 2015 (has links)
A fragmentação e a redução do habitat são as principais causas do declínio populacional e de biodiversidade no mundo, seguidas pela sobrecaça. Essas perturbações levaram a família Cracidae ao posto de família de aves mais ameaçada das Américas. Diversos programas de reintrodução já foram conduzidos com cracídeos no Brasil, a começar pela reintrodução do mutum-do-sudeste (Crax blumenbachii Spix, 1825) na Fazenda Macedônia (FM) em Ipaba, MG. O objetivo deste trabalho foi estimar o tamanho e a densidade populacional e a razão sexual dos mutuns existentes na FM e analisar o uso da paisagem pela espécie. Os dados foram coletados ao longo de 6 meses por transecção linear (esforço amostral: 280 km) e analisados segundo protocolos de amostragem por distância linear e ocupação. O tamanho populacional foi estimado em 34 (10 111) indivíduos e a densidade em 2,36 (1,58 7,79) indivíduos/km². Entretanto, a proporção de área utilizada foi estimada em 21%, indicando que a densidade para as áreas realmente ocupadas pode ser mais alta. A intensidade de uso da área parece estar correlacionada principalmente à densidade do sub-bosque e à oferta de suplementação alimentar. A taxa de crescimento populacional foi estimada em -0,047 (-0,137 0,018), o que indica um declínio. É possível que este declínio esteja ligado ao tamanho reduzido da população, que a torna mais susceptível à estocasticidade demográfica, ambiental e genética e ao efeito Allee. Os mesmos fatores também podem estar provocando um desvio na razão sexual, estimada em 0,35 (0,20 0,47). / Fragmentation and habitat loss are the two main causes of population and biodiversity decline, followed by overhunting. Such impacts made the Cracidae family the most endangered bird family in American continents. In Brazil, many reintroduction programs focused on cracids. The first one reintroduced the Red-billed Curassow (Crax blumenbachii Spix, 1825) in Ipaba, MG, Brazil. This work aimed to estimate the population size and density, the sex ratio and the landscape use of the Red-billed Curassow population reintroduced in Ipaba. We collected the data along 6 months through line-transects, totalizing 280 km of effort. The analysis followed distance sampling and occupancy protocols. We estimated the population size in 34 (10 111) birds and the density was 2.36 (1.58 7.79) birds/ha. However, we estimated the proportion of area effective used in 21%, what means that the density for such area might be higher. Apparently, the intensity of habitat use is mostly correlated to the understory density and to food supplementation. We estimated the population growth rate in -0.047 (-0.137 0.018), what indicates a decrease. Its possible that the population is declining due to its size, once small populations are more likely to suffer because of demographic, environmental and genetic stochasticity and Allee effect. The same factors might explain the skewed sex ratio, estimated in 0.35 (0.20 0.47).
44

An investigation on the changing processes and emergent patterns of occupancy from the core to the edge of the species range, and the consequences for onward expansion

Morgan, William Hugh January 2018 (has links)
The geographical distributions of many species are changing in response to rapid environmental change, and lags between the emergence and colonisation of new habitat areas are common. Given many species distributions are not at equilibrium with the environment, a greater understanding of the processes that underpin range expansion is required to predict where lags might emerge. Here I explore how population processes lead to emergent patterns of occupancy from the core to the edge of the species range. Working with water voles (Arvicola amphibius) in the UK, I carry out large scale surveys of a recovering metapopulation to explore the contribution of environment and the colonisation process in limiting range extent. I then use experimental translocations of water voles to quantify drivers of colonisation and local persistence, and the spatial scale over which these processes operate. I also explore the role of sociality and conspecific attraction in driving the formation of local populations at low landscape densities, and investigate the potential for between-individual variation in a behavioural trait to influence the formation of these spatial structures. Onward expansion was limited by the spatial scale of the colonisation process, and abrupt declines in occupancy at the range edge suggest that immigration increased the chance of local persistence. Social attraction led to build up of local populations, while more distant, equally suitable habitat area remained vacant. Using an individual based modelling approach, I then test the effect of different dispersal strategies on the rate of range expansion for biologically realistic mating systems. Mating finding requirements lead to slower expansion, though avoiding high density patches and mate-searching reduced these lags. Lags may emerge from processes across a range of spatial scales, though species translocations may offer a potential tool for mitigating these lags, and prevent substantial declines in geographical distributions.
45

Ecology of Greater Sage-Grouse Inhabiting the Southern Portion of the Rich-Morgan-Summit Sage-Grouse Management Area

Flack, M. Brandon 01 December 2017 (has links)
Greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus; sage-grouse) are sagebrush obligates and are therefore considered to be key indicators of sagebrush ecosystem health. Sage-grouse populations have declined range-wide over the last century due to loss and fragmentation of sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) habitats. Sage-grouse populations found in large intact sagebrush landscapes are considered to be more resilient, however, some small isolated populations persist and thrive in fragmented landscapes. Because of Utah’s unique topography and geography, sage-grouse habitat is discontinuous and populations are naturally dispersed throughout the state in suitable intact blocks or in disconnected islands of sagebrush habitat. Thus, Utah populations provide the ideal place to understand how landscape attributes may influence at risk populations. Of these, the Morgan-Summit population is important because very little was known about the general ecology of this population and it experiences a high level of anthropogenic disturbances. I examined seasonal movement patterns, habitat selection, vital rates (nest initiation rates, nest success, clutch size, breeding success, brood success, and survival probability of breeding age birds) and the influence of vegetation components on vital rates of a small geographically isolated sage-grouse population in Morgan and Summit Counties in northern Utah from 2015–2016. To collect the data, I deployed 25 very-high frequency radio collars and 10 platform terminal transmitters and completed micro-site vegetation surveys at nest, brood, and paired random sites and then made comparisons. Nest sites exhibited variation in vegetation structure that influenced nest success, while brood sites did not. This population is one of the most productive in Utah exhibiting high nest initiation rates, hatching rates, and brood success rates despite limited habitat space and small seasonal movements. Transmitter type had no influence on vital rates, which is contrary to other studies, and limited influence on habitat selection. Sage-grouse avoided trees and developed areas, especially during the breeding season. Selection of other landscape variables was season-dependent. This information suggests that a sage-grouse population can occupy areas of limited habitat on an annual basis if seasonal habitat requirements are met. This study provides information that stake holders can utilize to conserve critical seasonal habitats within this study area where the population could be negatively affected by anthropogenic development pressure.
46

The Spatial Ecology of Eastern Hognose Snakes (Heterodon platirhinos): Habitat Selection, Home Range Size, and the Effect of Roads on Movement Patterns

Robson, Laura E 30 November 2011 (has links)
Habitat loss is the greatest contributor to the decline of species globally and thus understanding habitat use and the consequences fragmentation has on biodiversity is a fundamental step towards management and recovery. I conducted a radio-telemetry study to examine the spatial ecology and the effects of roads on Eastern Hognose Snakes (Heterodon platirhinos), a species at risk, in the Long Point Region of Ontario, Canada. I tested habitat selection at multiple spatial scales and I found that within the home range, snakes avoided agricultural land and selected open sand barrens, particularly for nesting. At the local scale, snakes avoided mature overstory trees and used younger patches of forest. Used locations had more woody debris, logs and low-vegetative coverage than locations selected at random. Eastern Hognose Snakes also showed avoidance of paved road crossings in their seasonal movements, but readily crossed unpaved roads. Management efforts for this species at risk should be placed on the conservation of sand barrens and on the construction of road underpasses to prevent genetic isolation of populations.
47

Influences of Personal Information, Public Information, and Extra-pair Paternity on Breeding Site Fidelity in a Songbird

Campomizzi, Andrew James 2011 August 1900 (has links)
I investigated the role of extra-pair paternity on use of public information and the interaction between public information and personal information for patch fidelity decisions. It is unknown if songbirds use public information about the number of conspecific fledglings for patch fidelity decisions when extra-pair paternity is uncommon. I tested if probability of patch fidelity was associated with (1) number of fledglings in adjacent territories (public information), and (2) number of fledglings raised with a social mate (personal information). I used logistic regression to predict probability of patch fidelity of males and females based on the 2 uncorrelated predictor variables (Spearman’s rank correlation, S = 21895.28, n = 50, P = 0.723, r = –0.051). I monitored patch fidelity of 107 territories, counted the number of fledglings in each territory, and assessed parentage of 102 young from 36 nests for white-eyed vireos (Vireo griseus) from 2008–2010 in a 100 ha patch of woodland in central Texas, USA. I excluded the social male as the father of 3 of the 102 young and did not exclude any of the social females as the mother with parentage analysis using 6 microsatellite loci. The number of fledglings in adjacent territories was not a good predictor of probability of patch fidelity for males (beta 1 = 0.166, df = 35, P = 0.247, Nagelkerke’s R2 = 0.054) or females (beta 1 = 0.121, df = 17, P = 0.670, Nagelkerke’s R2 = 0.016). The number of fledglings raised with a social mate was also not a good predictor of probability of patch fidelity for males (beta 1 = –0.296, df = 43, P = 0.360, Nagelkerke’s R2 = 0.029), whereas it was a good predictor for females (beta 1 = 1.281, df = 21, P = 0.048, Nagelkerke’s R2 = 0.409). The dominant ecological concepts for explaining site fidelity in songbirds, win-stay lose-switch (based on personal reproductive success with a social mate) and public information, did not predict probability of patch fidelity well for male white-eyed vireos. The win-stay lose-switch model, but not public information was a good predictor of probability of patch fidelity for females. My results suggest that use of public information may depend on frequency of extra-pair paternity. Males may primarily use other information for patch fidelity decisions beyond reproductive success of conspecifics for patch fidelity decisions in some circumstances. My results support the need to ensure high levels of nesting success for females to return and maintain populations in areas managed for breeding songbirds for conservation efforts to be successful.
48

The Spatial Ecology of Eastern Hognose Snakes (Heterodon platirhinos): Habitat Selection, Home Range Size, and the Effect of Roads on Movement Patterns

Robson, Laura E 30 November 2011 (has links)
Habitat loss is the greatest contributor to the decline of species globally and thus understanding habitat use and the consequences fragmentation has on biodiversity is a fundamental step towards management and recovery. I conducted a radio-telemetry study to examine the spatial ecology and the effects of roads on Eastern Hognose Snakes (Heterodon platirhinos), a species at risk, in the Long Point Region of Ontario, Canada. I tested habitat selection at multiple spatial scales and I found that within the home range, snakes avoided agricultural land and selected open sand barrens, particularly for nesting. At the local scale, snakes avoided mature overstory trees and used younger patches of forest. Used locations had more woody debris, logs and low-vegetative coverage than locations selected at random. Eastern Hognose Snakes also showed avoidance of paved road crossings in their seasonal movements, but readily crossed unpaved roads. Management efforts for this species at risk should be placed on the conservation of sand barrens and on the construction of road underpasses to prevent genetic isolation of populations.
49

Influence of Substrate on Coral Reef Fish Communities

Neely, Karen Lynn 23 June 2008 (has links)
<p>Coral reef fish coexist in a state of high diversity that has not been successfully explained by niche diversification, larval supply, differential mortality, or a suite of other proposed factors. These processes are all occurring on a diverse substrate that would be expected to affect the abundance and distribution of fish by directing habitat preferences as well as affecting competitive and predatory success. I conducted correlational studies on healthy and degraded Caribbean reefs that addressed fish abundances at the levels of community, species, and age class. I also experimentally tested habitat preferences in two ways: choice experiments on adults of common species that determined preferences for live coral and rugosity in an isolated environment, and monitoring of artificial reefs differing in live coral cover that tested habitat selection of adults and juveniles in the field. These observations all show that live coral had no effect on community parameters such as abundance or diversity, but that rugosity was positively related to species richness. However, these measures of the community masked differences at the species and age class level. A handful of species exhibited positive or negative preferences for live coral, but these selections did not follow a taxonomic or trophic-level classification. Species within the genus Stegastes, for example, could either aggregate towards or avoid live coral. One species even reversed its habitat preference as it matured. Field distributions were not determined solely by these habitat preferences, but inclusion of competitive interactions into a multi-factorial model explained distribution of some species. Results suggest that changes in live coral cover, an increasingly common phenomenon, would not affect fish at a community level, but could affect a few species through changes to recruitment or alteration of competitive interactions.</p> / Dissertation
50

The movements and reproductive success of re-introduced darters in the Pigeon River, TN

Harrison, Virginia Anne, January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Tennessee, Knoxville, 2004. / Title from title page screen (viewed May 13, 2004). Thesis advisor: J. Larry Wilson. Document formatted into pages (viii, 58 p. : col. ill., col. maps). Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 54-57).

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