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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.
11

Feeding ecology of the genus Pangasianodon in a reservoir using stable isotope ratio and fatty acid analyses / 安定同位体比および脂肪酸分析を用いたダム湖におけるパンガシアノドン属の摂餌生態に関する研究

Medo, Ayano 23 January 2024 (has links)
京都大学 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(情報学) / 甲第25023号 / 情博第855号 / 新制||情||143(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院情報学研究科社会情報学専攻 / (主査)教授 大手 信人, 教授 土居 秀幸, 教授 三田村 啓理 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Informatics / Kyoto University / DGAM
12

Trophic niche partitioning of small coral reef mesopredators (Family: Pseudochromidae) in the Red Sea: a multi-method approach based on visual analysis, DNA metabarcoding, and stable isotope analysis

Palacios-Narváez, Stephania 06 1900 (has links)
Understanding how diversity is partitioned along natural and anthropogenic gradients within ecosystems is important to predict the persistence of species and the ecological functions they provide. Dottybacks (Pseudochromidae) are a diverse group of mesopredators that feed on cryptic macroinvertebrates and newly recruited fishes. This diet behavior may modify the composition and abundance of cryptobenthic fauna within coral reef ecosystems. Understanding how mesopredators partition their diet and the functional role provided by available prey within reefs can assist in understanding the ecological role these predators contribute to coral reef trophodynamics and the effect of their population changes on the reef ecosystem. To assess the diet of three common Pseudochromis species and two distinct color morphs of P. flavivertex in the Red Sea, I used a combination of i) visual stomach content analysis, ii) stomach DNA metabarcoding (18S, COI), and iii) stable isotope analysis (δ15N, δ13C). I evaluated i) dietary niche breadth, ii) variation in diet composition, iii) degree of dietary specialization, and iv) trophic level. These techniques revealed partitioning in the dietary composition and resource use between P. flavivertex, P. fridmani, and P. olivaceus. Although the two technics used for stomach content analysis did not show differences in the dietary composition within color morphs of P. flavivertex, the isotopic signature showed marked differences in the isotopic niche and resource use between morphs. Resource partitioning appears to be driven by variation in resource availability in the fish habitat and by subtle differences in the ecology of these species. These findings provide evidence of species-specific differences in the trophic ecology of pseudochromids in the Red Sea and demonstrate their important role as predators of cryptic invertebrates and small fish, being key components in energy transfer in coral reef ecosystems by acting as a link between cryptofauna and higher trophic levels. This study highlights the importance of combining several approaches (short-term: visual analysis and DNA metabarcoding; and long-term: isotope analysis) when assessing the feeding habits of coral reef fish, as they provide different and complementary information necessary to delimit their niches and understand the role that small mesopredators play in coral reef ecosystems.
13

Padrões funcionais de organização de árvores juvenis em manchas florestais na serra do sudeste do Rio Grande do Sul

Carlucci, Marcos Bergmann January 2011 (has links)
Uma das mais relevantes perspectivas que buscam explicar como as comunidades ecológicas se organizam é a teoria do nicho, que se divide em duas linhas de pesquisa com filosofias opostas. A primeira enfatiza que diferenças nas características funcionais de organismos permitem sua coexistência, enquanto que a segunda avalia até que ponto membros de uma mesma comunidade tendem a exibir similaridade em seus atributos funcionais. Uma variedade de métodos analíticos tem sido desenvolvida para avaliar mecanismos ligados a cada um dos processos. Explorando o padrão de distribuição de atributos de comunidades, a limitação de similaridade resulta em divergência de atributos, enquanto a ação local de filtros ambientais em geral produz convergência de atributos. Nesse sentido, o método para discriminação de padrões de organização por convergência ou por divergência de atributos no contexto de metacomunidades é de grande valor. Nesta dissertação, tal abordagem é utilizada para a avaliação de padrões de convergência e de divergência de atributos de plantas arbóreas juvenis em manchas florestais. Não incluímos informação filogenética ou de espécies a fim de avaliarmos até que ponto uma abordagem plenamente funcional pode explicar padrões de comunidades. O trabalho foi desenvolvido na Serra do Sudeste do RS, que consiste em um mosaico campo-floresta relativamente bem conservado. Algo instigante na Serra do Sudeste é a presença das coníferas Araucaria angustifolia (Bertol.) Kuntze e Podocarpus lambertii Klotzsch ex Endl. em várias manchas florestais, espécies reconhecidas como características da Floresta com Araucária do Planalto Sul-Brasileiro. Tal ocorrência vem sendo discutida há muitas décadas na literatura, mas nenhum estudo ecológico feito nessas áreas foi publicado ainda. Assim, nesta dissertação, tive como objetivos avançar na teoria relacionada à organização de comunidades e obter dados de qualidade para a avaliação continuada da dinâmica ecológica por trás dos mosaicos campo-floresta com presença de A. angustifolia na Serra do Sudeste. Os resultados encontrados revelaram padrões tanto de convergência quanto de divergência de atributos. A abordagem inteiramente funcional utilizada neste trabalho foi muito útil para a inferência de prováveis mecanismos de nicho envolvidos na organização das comunidades de árvores juvenis. Nós defendemos que a análise de dados de atributos referentes ao nível de indivíduos em um contexto de metacomunidades é a melhor maneira de explorar diretamente como a convergência e a divergência de atributos realmente se comporta ao longo de um dado gradiente. Com relação ao limite austral da distribuição de Araucaria angustifolia, caso as áreas da Serra do Sudeste sejam consideradas nativas, haveria uma ocorrência disjunta da espécie e, talvez, do tipo vegetacional Floresta com Araucária. Esse tema é especialmente importante no que concerne a uma possível migração da espécie ou mesmo da flora típica da formação rumo ao sul, ou alternativamente a uma possível evidência remanescente de que a espécie ou mesmo de que a formação tenham ocorrido continuamente até essas latitudes, talvez há centenas de milhares de anos atrás. A resolução desse mistério, entretanto, provavelmente só seja alcançada através de estudos paleopolínicos e genéticos. De qualquer forma, tais áreas devem ser protegidas, já que seu desconhecimento por grande parte da comunidade científica facilita a negligência de sua conservação. / Ecologists have considered niche theory one of the most relevant perspectives attempting to explain ecological community assembly. It is divided in two research programs with opposed philosophies. The first emphasises that differences in functional attributes of organisms enable their coexistence, whereas the second evaluate to which extent members of a same community tend to exhibit similarity regarding their functional traits. A variety of analytical methods have been developed for assessing mechanisms related to each of these processes. By exploring the trait distribution pattern in communities, it is generally accepted that the local action of environmental filters generates a pattern of trait convergence, whereas limiting similarity leads to trait divergence. In this sense, the method for discriminating traitconvergence and trait-divergence assembly patterns in the metacommunity context is of great value. In this dissertation, such approach is used for evaluating convergence and divergence patterns of tree sapling traits in forest patches in the Serra do Sudeste region of Rio Grande do Sul state, southern Brazil. We did not include phylogenetic or species identity information in the analysis since we wanted to evaluate to which extent an entirely functional approach could explain community patterns. The study was carried out in Serra do Sudeste, which consists of a forest-grassland mosaic relatively well conserved. Something puzzling in Serra do Sudeste is the presence of conifers such as Araucaria angustifolia (Bertol.) Kuntze and Podocarpus lambertii Klotzsch ex Endl. in several forest patches. These species are characteristic of the Araucaria forest occurring in the South-Brazilian Plateau. Such occurrence has been matter of a long-lasting debate in the regional literature, but no ecological study done in these areas has been published yet. In this dissertation I aimed at advancing on the theoretical bases of community assembly and at gathering data for continuously evaluating the ecological dynamics of the forest-grassland mosaics with presence of A. angustifolia in Serra do Sudeste. The results revealed both trait convergence and divergence patterns, which indicated mechanisms for the assembly of tree sapling communities. The entirely functional approach applied here was very useful to infer probable mechanisms underlying community assembly. We argue that the use of individual-based trait information in a metacommunity context is the best way to directly explore how trait convergence and trait divergence behave along a given gradient. With regard to the austral boundary of Araucaria angustifolia distribution, if the patches of Serra do Sudeste are considered native, there would be a disjunct occurrence of the species and perhaps of the vegetational type Araucaria forest. This issue is especially important regarding a possible migration of the species or even of the typical associated flora southwards, or alternatively, regarding a possible relict evidence that the species had continuously occurred along such latitudes in a remote past. Nonetheless, the resolution of this puzzle probably only will be achieved through genetic and paleopollen studies. Anyway, such areas must be protected as their omission in important scientific studies facilitates the negligence of their conservation.
14

Padrões funcionais de organização de árvores juvenis em manchas florestais na serra do sudeste do Rio Grande do Sul

Carlucci, Marcos Bergmann January 2011 (has links)
Uma das mais relevantes perspectivas que buscam explicar como as comunidades ecológicas se organizam é a teoria do nicho, que se divide em duas linhas de pesquisa com filosofias opostas. A primeira enfatiza que diferenças nas características funcionais de organismos permitem sua coexistência, enquanto que a segunda avalia até que ponto membros de uma mesma comunidade tendem a exibir similaridade em seus atributos funcionais. Uma variedade de métodos analíticos tem sido desenvolvida para avaliar mecanismos ligados a cada um dos processos. Explorando o padrão de distribuição de atributos de comunidades, a limitação de similaridade resulta em divergência de atributos, enquanto a ação local de filtros ambientais em geral produz convergência de atributos. Nesse sentido, o método para discriminação de padrões de organização por convergência ou por divergência de atributos no contexto de metacomunidades é de grande valor. Nesta dissertação, tal abordagem é utilizada para a avaliação de padrões de convergência e de divergência de atributos de plantas arbóreas juvenis em manchas florestais. Não incluímos informação filogenética ou de espécies a fim de avaliarmos até que ponto uma abordagem plenamente funcional pode explicar padrões de comunidades. O trabalho foi desenvolvido na Serra do Sudeste do RS, que consiste em um mosaico campo-floresta relativamente bem conservado. Algo instigante na Serra do Sudeste é a presença das coníferas Araucaria angustifolia (Bertol.) Kuntze e Podocarpus lambertii Klotzsch ex Endl. em várias manchas florestais, espécies reconhecidas como características da Floresta com Araucária do Planalto Sul-Brasileiro. Tal ocorrência vem sendo discutida há muitas décadas na literatura, mas nenhum estudo ecológico feito nessas áreas foi publicado ainda. Assim, nesta dissertação, tive como objetivos avançar na teoria relacionada à organização de comunidades e obter dados de qualidade para a avaliação continuada da dinâmica ecológica por trás dos mosaicos campo-floresta com presença de A. angustifolia na Serra do Sudeste. Os resultados encontrados revelaram padrões tanto de convergência quanto de divergência de atributos. A abordagem inteiramente funcional utilizada neste trabalho foi muito útil para a inferência de prováveis mecanismos de nicho envolvidos na organização das comunidades de árvores juvenis. Nós defendemos que a análise de dados de atributos referentes ao nível de indivíduos em um contexto de metacomunidades é a melhor maneira de explorar diretamente como a convergência e a divergência de atributos realmente se comporta ao longo de um dado gradiente. Com relação ao limite austral da distribuição de Araucaria angustifolia, caso as áreas da Serra do Sudeste sejam consideradas nativas, haveria uma ocorrência disjunta da espécie e, talvez, do tipo vegetacional Floresta com Araucária. Esse tema é especialmente importante no que concerne a uma possível migração da espécie ou mesmo da flora típica da formação rumo ao sul, ou alternativamente a uma possível evidência remanescente de que a espécie ou mesmo de que a formação tenham ocorrido continuamente até essas latitudes, talvez há centenas de milhares de anos atrás. A resolução desse mistério, entretanto, provavelmente só seja alcançada através de estudos paleopolínicos e genéticos. De qualquer forma, tais áreas devem ser protegidas, já que seu desconhecimento por grande parte da comunidade científica facilita a negligência de sua conservação. / Ecologists have considered niche theory one of the most relevant perspectives attempting to explain ecological community assembly. It is divided in two research programs with opposed philosophies. The first emphasises that differences in functional attributes of organisms enable their coexistence, whereas the second evaluate to which extent members of a same community tend to exhibit similarity regarding their functional traits. A variety of analytical methods have been developed for assessing mechanisms related to each of these processes. By exploring the trait distribution pattern in communities, it is generally accepted that the local action of environmental filters generates a pattern of trait convergence, whereas limiting similarity leads to trait divergence. In this sense, the method for discriminating traitconvergence and trait-divergence assembly patterns in the metacommunity context is of great value. In this dissertation, such approach is used for evaluating convergence and divergence patterns of tree sapling traits in forest patches in the Serra do Sudeste region of Rio Grande do Sul state, southern Brazil. We did not include phylogenetic or species identity information in the analysis since we wanted to evaluate to which extent an entirely functional approach could explain community patterns. The study was carried out in Serra do Sudeste, which consists of a forest-grassland mosaic relatively well conserved. Something puzzling in Serra do Sudeste is the presence of conifers such as Araucaria angustifolia (Bertol.) Kuntze and Podocarpus lambertii Klotzsch ex Endl. in several forest patches. These species are characteristic of the Araucaria forest occurring in the South-Brazilian Plateau. Such occurrence has been matter of a long-lasting debate in the regional literature, but no ecological study done in these areas has been published yet. In this dissertation I aimed at advancing on the theoretical bases of community assembly and at gathering data for continuously evaluating the ecological dynamics of the forest-grassland mosaics with presence of A. angustifolia in Serra do Sudeste. The results revealed both trait convergence and divergence patterns, which indicated mechanisms for the assembly of tree sapling communities. The entirely functional approach applied here was very useful to infer probable mechanisms underlying community assembly. We argue that the use of individual-based trait information in a metacommunity context is the best way to directly explore how trait convergence and trait divergence behave along a given gradient. With regard to the austral boundary of Araucaria angustifolia distribution, if the patches of Serra do Sudeste are considered native, there would be a disjunct occurrence of the species and perhaps of the vegetational type Araucaria forest. This issue is especially important regarding a possible migration of the species or even of the typical associated flora southwards, or alternatively, regarding a possible relict evidence that the species had continuously occurred along such latitudes in a remote past. Nonetheless, the resolution of this puzzle probably only will be achieved through genetic and paleopollen studies. Anyway, such areas must be protected as their omission in important scientific studies facilitates the negligence of their conservation.
15

Padrões funcionais de organização de árvores juvenis em manchas florestais na serra do sudeste do Rio Grande do Sul

Carlucci, Marcos Bergmann January 2011 (has links)
Uma das mais relevantes perspectivas que buscam explicar como as comunidades ecológicas se organizam é a teoria do nicho, que se divide em duas linhas de pesquisa com filosofias opostas. A primeira enfatiza que diferenças nas características funcionais de organismos permitem sua coexistência, enquanto que a segunda avalia até que ponto membros de uma mesma comunidade tendem a exibir similaridade em seus atributos funcionais. Uma variedade de métodos analíticos tem sido desenvolvida para avaliar mecanismos ligados a cada um dos processos. Explorando o padrão de distribuição de atributos de comunidades, a limitação de similaridade resulta em divergência de atributos, enquanto a ação local de filtros ambientais em geral produz convergência de atributos. Nesse sentido, o método para discriminação de padrões de organização por convergência ou por divergência de atributos no contexto de metacomunidades é de grande valor. Nesta dissertação, tal abordagem é utilizada para a avaliação de padrões de convergência e de divergência de atributos de plantas arbóreas juvenis em manchas florestais. Não incluímos informação filogenética ou de espécies a fim de avaliarmos até que ponto uma abordagem plenamente funcional pode explicar padrões de comunidades. O trabalho foi desenvolvido na Serra do Sudeste do RS, que consiste em um mosaico campo-floresta relativamente bem conservado. Algo instigante na Serra do Sudeste é a presença das coníferas Araucaria angustifolia (Bertol.) Kuntze e Podocarpus lambertii Klotzsch ex Endl. em várias manchas florestais, espécies reconhecidas como características da Floresta com Araucária do Planalto Sul-Brasileiro. Tal ocorrência vem sendo discutida há muitas décadas na literatura, mas nenhum estudo ecológico feito nessas áreas foi publicado ainda. Assim, nesta dissertação, tive como objetivos avançar na teoria relacionada à organização de comunidades e obter dados de qualidade para a avaliação continuada da dinâmica ecológica por trás dos mosaicos campo-floresta com presença de A. angustifolia na Serra do Sudeste. Os resultados encontrados revelaram padrões tanto de convergência quanto de divergência de atributos. A abordagem inteiramente funcional utilizada neste trabalho foi muito útil para a inferência de prováveis mecanismos de nicho envolvidos na organização das comunidades de árvores juvenis. Nós defendemos que a análise de dados de atributos referentes ao nível de indivíduos em um contexto de metacomunidades é a melhor maneira de explorar diretamente como a convergência e a divergência de atributos realmente se comporta ao longo de um dado gradiente. Com relação ao limite austral da distribuição de Araucaria angustifolia, caso as áreas da Serra do Sudeste sejam consideradas nativas, haveria uma ocorrência disjunta da espécie e, talvez, do tipo vegetacional Floresta com Araucária. Esse tema é especialmente importante no que concerne a uma possível migração da espécie ou mesmo da flora típica da formação rumo ao sul, ou alternativamente a uma possível evidência remanescente de que a espécie ou mesmo de que a formação tenham ocorrido continuamente até essas latitudes, talvez há centenas de milhares de anos atrás. A resolução desse mistério, entretanto, provavelmente só seja alcançada através de estudos paleopolínicos e genéticos. De qualquer forma, tais áreas devem ser protegidas, já que seu desconhecimento por grande parte da comunidade científica facilita a negligência de sua conservação. / Ecologists have considered niche theory one of the most relevant perspectives attempting to explain ecological community assembly. It is divided in two research programs with opposed philosophies. The first emphasises that differences in functional attributes of organisms enable their coexistence, whereas the second evaluate to which extent members of a same community tend to exhibit similarity regarding their functional traits. A variety of analytical methods have been developed for assessing mechanisms related to each of these processes. By exploring the trait distribution pattern in communities, it is generally accepted that the local action of environmental filters generates a pattern of trait convergence, whereas limiting similarity leads to trait divergence. In this sense, the method for discriminating traitconvergence and trait-divergence assembly patterns in the metacommunity context is of great value. In this dissertation, such approach is used for evaluating convergence and divergence patterns of tree sapling traits in forest patches in the Serra do Sudeste region of Rio Grande do Sul state, southern Brazil. We did not include phylogenetic or species identity information in the analysis since we wanted to evaluate to which extent an entirely functional approach could explain community patterns. The study was carried out in Serra do Sudeste, which consists of a forest-grassland mosaic relatively well conserved. Something puzzling in Serra do Sudeste is the presence of conifers such as Araucaria angustifolia (Bertol.) Kuntze and Podocarpus lambertii Klotzsch ex Endl. in several forest patches. These species are characteristic of the Araucaria forest occurring in the South-Brazilian Plateau. Such occurrence has been matter of a long-lasting debate in the regional literature, but no ecological study done in these areas has been published yet. In this dissertation I aimed at advancing on the theoretical bases of community assembly and at gathering data for continuously evaluating the ecological dynamics of the forest-grassland mosaics with presence of A. angustifolia in Serra do Sudeste. The results revealed both trait convergence and divergence patterns, which indicated mechanisms for the assembly of tree sapling communities. The entirely functional approach applied here was very useful to infer probable mechanisms underlying community assembly. We argue that the use of individual-based trait information in a metacommunity context is the best way to directly explore how trait convergence and trait divergence behave along a given gradient. With regard to the austral boundary of Araucaria angustifolia distribution, if the patches of Serra do Sudeste are considered native, there would be a disjunct occurrence of the species and perhaps of the vegetational type Araucaria forest. This issue is especially important regarding a possible migration of the species or even of the typical associated flora southwards, or alternatively, regarding a possible relict evidence that the species had continuously occurred along such latitudes in a remote past. Nonetheless, the resolution of this puzzle probably only will be achieved through genetic and paleopollen studies. Anyway, such areas must be protected as their omission in important scientific studies facilitates the negligence of their conservation.
16

First Occurrence of the Enigmatic Peccaries Mylohyus elmorei and Prosthennops serus From the Appalachians: Latest Hemphillian to Early Blancan of Gray Fossil Site, Tennessee

Doughty, Evan M., Wallace, Steven C., Schubert, Blaine W., Lyon, Lauren M. 01 January 2018 (has links)
Two peccary species, Mylohyus elmorei and Prosthennops serus are described from the medium-bodied fauna of the Gray Fossil Site (GFS) of northeastern Tennessee. This site, recognized as an oak-hickory forest, is latest Hemphillian or earliest Blancan based on mammalian biochronology, with an estimated age of 4.9-4.5 Ma. The GFS represents the only site outside the Palmetto Fauna of Florida with M. elmorei, greatly expanding the species range north over 920 km, well into the Appalachian region. This is also the first Appalachian occurrence of the relatively widespread P. serus. Our understanding of intraspecific variation for both M. elmorei and P. serus is expanded due to morphological and proportional differences found in cranial and dental material from the GFS, Tyner Farm locality, Palmetto Fauna, and within the literature. The GFS M. elmorei material represents the most complete mandible and second cranium for the species, and preserve intraspecific variation in the length of the diastema, dental proportions, and the complexity of the cuspules of the hypoconulid complex. Similarly, mandibular material from the GFS for P. serus exhibited larger dentitions and a greater degree of robustness than currently recognized for the species.
17

Risk-Prone and Risk-Averse Foraging Strategies Enable Niche Partitioning in Two Diurnal Orb-Weaving Spider Species

Long, Mitchell, Jones, Thomas C., Moore, Darrell, Yampolsky, Lev 07 April 2022 (has links)
Niche partitioning is a major component in understanding community ecology and how different species divide limited environmental resources, enabling them to coexist. Temporal niche partitioning has been widely studied in a broad sense, such as in species that forage on similar nutritional sources dividing activity along diurnal and nocturnal classifications. Here, we approach this temporal niche partitioning with higher resolution to investigate partitioning between species within the same broad temporal and foraging niche. Two species of diurnal orb-weaving spiders (Araneae: Araneidae), Verrucosa arenata and Micrathena gracilis, both construct their orbs in spatially similar locations throughout the understory of deciduous forests in the morning, forage on flying insects throughout the day, and retreat in the evening. However, despite consisting of what appear to be roughly similar total lengths of adhesive silk in the capture spiral, overall orb structure is starkly different: V. arenata orbs are relatively large in diameter and sparse with capture threads; M. gracilis orbs, condensed in diameter and tightly coiled. What other differences might distinguish foraging strategy within this same niche? With extensive observation in their natural environment, we have found that these two species employ two distinct strategies by modulating behavior and orb structure: V. arenata construct orbs earlier in the day, resulting in a longer foraging period. However, V. arenata webs are more likely to be destroyed during the day such that there is a higher variance in foraging duration in V. arenata. We also found that V. arenata actively capture and consume more large prey and that M. gracilis more passively capture and consume small prey more reliably. These data suggest that these species have evolved different foraging strategies with V. arenata being risk-prone and M. gracilis being risk-averse. This study provides a more nuanced analysis of niche partitioning between species occupying otherwise similar temporal, habitat, and foraging niches.
18

Identifying Environmental Factors Driving Differences in Climatic Niche Overlap in Peromyscus Mice

Russell, Vanessa 14 August 2019 (has links)
No description available.
19

Longitudinal Diet Studies of Arctic Whales

Matthews, Cory 11 September 2013 (has links)
An animal’s foraging ecology can vary over a range of temporal scales, mirroring seasonal and longer term changes in prey availability, as well as ontogenetic shifts in diet and distribution. Obtaining individual-based, longitudinal diet information through direct observation, however, is logistically challenging for marine mammals that pursue and consume prey underwater, and are often widely distributed. Isotopic profiling along continuously growing tissues like teeth and baleen, which archive dietary inputs at the time of growth in their stable isotope composition, allows for chronological dietary reconstructions over multi-year timespans. This thesis reports longitudinal diet studies of three Arctic whale species, killer whales (Orcinus orca), bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus) and beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas), derived from serial isotopic measurements along teeth and baleen. Study objectives varied by species, but general goals were to characterize seasonal, ontogenetic, and/or individual diet variation. Results revealed similar trophic-level diet, but regional spatial separation, among eastern Canadian Arctic/Northwest Atlantic killer whales. However, isotope and tooth wear differences between two individuals and the rest of the sampled whales suggested potential specialisation on sharks, while the other whales likely had diets comprising marine mammals. Cyclic isotopic variation along Eastern Canada-West Greenland bowhead whale baleen was consistent with year-round foraging, although at a reduced rate during winter. Resting zooplankton could be an important food resource outside of periods of peak productivity, and accessibility likely drives winter habitat selection. Isotopic cycling did not differ between female and male bowheads, or among age classes, indicating similar seasonal foraging patterns despite reported spatial segregation throughout their summer range. Individual beluga whales from three eastern Canadian Arctic populations varied in timing of ontogenetic diet shifts (i.e. weaning age), as well as overall trophic position, which could reflect size-specific energetic requirements and foraging capabilities. Population-specific beluga whale diet trends over a period of several decades likely reflected climate-related expansions of southern forage fish. Collectively, findings of seasonal, ontogenetic, and/or individual diet variation contribute a greater understanding of intrapopulation variation in foraging ecology of these species, and of large-scale structuring of Arctic marine ecosystems.
20

Understanding the mechanisms behind invasion to improve the efficacy of control strategies

Jennifer Firn Unknown Date (has links)
Abstract The negative impact of invasive plant species on biodiversity and ecosystem functions, such as productivity and nutrient cycling has been deemed a global epidemic. To address this worldwide concern, information is needed on how the invasion process happens and how to control an existing invasion. The main aim of the research presented in this thesis was to develop a better understanding of the interacting role different mechanisms play in facilitating invasion and then link this understanding to the design of more effective control strategies. This aim is significant because traditional weed control strategies are not working. The estimated cost of controlling weeds in Australia is $1.4 billion per year in agricultural landscapes. Despite this substantial investment, invasive weed species are estimated to continue to cost the agricultural industry $2.2 billion per year in loss of yield. Current control strategies tend to focus on killing or removing an invasive plant species directly with the application of herbicides and/or mechanical removal. These strategies have proven ineffectual because the plant communities that assemble after management often remain dominated by the same invader or another. In this thesis, I use a combination of empirical and modelling techniques to investigate how disturbance regimes and competitive interactions between invasive plants and native plants can be manipulated to improve the efficacy of restoration efforts. To do this, I use the model scenario of the invasion of Eragrostis curvula (African lovegrass), an invasive grass species introduced into Australia in the early 1900s from South Africa. This species has now spread into every Australian state and territory (chapter 2). I specifically focus on two mechanisms: (1) disturbance, i.e. cattle grazing, and (2) competitive interactions. In chapter 3, I examine connections between dominance and competitive differences among African lovegrass and several functionally similar native grass species in a pasture community. To test the displacement hypothesis, I used a glasshouse competition trial to investigate interactions between African lovegrass and two non-persisting native grass species (Themeda australis and Bothriochloa decipiens) with manipulations of resources, neighbour density, and establishment order. To test the partitioning hypothesis, I compared in situ water use patterns among African lovegrass and two coexisting native grass species (Aristida calycina and Aristida personata) based on the assumption that water is the most limiting resource in this system. The key finding of this chapter is that competition can have important, but contingent, impacts on dominance. Competitive differences appear to partially contribute to abundance patterns after establishment, but may be relatively unimportant during the establishment phase where disturbance appears more critical. In chapter 4, I provide evidence that the identification of mechanisms that led to an invasion, while crucial for the development of effective preventative measures and understanding the invasion process, may not be necessary for the design of more effective control strategies. To examine the effects of different control strategies on African lovegrass and the resultant community, I established a large factorial field-trial with a split-plot design. I manipulated grazing, soil nutrient levels and the presence of the invader. The most common control strategy (removing the causal disturbance and killing the invasive grass), based implicitly on traditional equilibrium models, was not an effective option for restoring a desirable native community. Instead, this strategy led to the dominance of a secondary invader. The most effective control strategy was based on alternative stable states models and involved maintaining grazing, and increasing the palatability of the invader with fertilizers. The key finding of this chapter is that novel approaches for control, which consider the dynamics of the invader-dominated system, are needed. In chapter 5, I investigate the benefits of explicitly incorporating actions that manipulate disturbance (natural or imposed) into control efforts. To do this, I first developed a process model that described the dynamics of an invader whose establishment is preferentially favoured by disturbance. I then couched this model in a decision theory framework, a stochastic dynamic program, and applied a case-study of another invasive plant species, Mimosa pigra (a perennial legume shrub and pan-tropical weed). The key finding of this chapter is that strategies should not only focus on existing invader-dominated sites, but should also protect sites occupied by native species from disturbances that facilitate invasion. The research discussed in this thesis makes three key contributions to a better understanding of the invasion process and the design of more effective control strategies: 1) the search for one key mechanism is not sufficient because multiple mechanisms can interact or shift in importance to facilitate different stages of invasion, 2) a novel approach is needed to restore a more desirable native community because the dynamics of the invader-dominated system can differ from the historical native community, and 3) control efforts should be broadened in focus to include protection of the integrity of native communities from disturbances that facilitate invasion.

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