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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.
61

The cheetahs of the Northern Tuli Game Reserve, Botswana: population estimates, monitoring techniques and human-predator conflict

Brassine, Eleanor I January 2015 (has links)
Remaining viable cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) populations in Africa are threatened by direct persecution through conflict with farmers and habitat degradation and fragmentation. Botswana is considered a stronghold for free roaming cheetahs in Africa, yet the country has had relatively limited research on its cheetahs, and information from the east of the country is lacking. Data on the current status of populations is thus required to make informed management decisions. My study provides estimates of population density, abundance, distribution and status for the demographically open cheetah population of the Northern Tuli Game Reserve (NOTUGRE) in Botswana. The effectiveness of two population monitoring methods, namely camera trapping and a photographic survey, were also investigated. Moreover, I report on the level of conflict between livestock farmers and predators on rural communal farmlands within and adjacent to NOTUGRE. Data were collected between May 2012 and November 2013. Results indicate a low population density of 0.61 ± 0.18 adult cheetahs per 100 km² and a minimum population size of 10 individuals (nine adults and one cub). Camera traps placed at cheetah scent-marking posts increased detection rates and provided ideal set up locations. This approach, together with Spatial Explicit Capture- Recapture (SECR) models, is recommended for future studies. The long-term studies that are required to better understand the status of cheetahs in Botswana do not exist. Thus, photographic surveys may provide an alternative method for providing baseline data on population numbers, distribution and demography. The third aspect of my study gathered information on levels of livestock loss and human tolerance of predators through the use of interviews (n = 80). Conflict with subsistence farmers is a concern as livestock depredation is relatively high (9.1% of total livestock owned) and farmers had an overall negative attitude towards conservation of large predators. My results suggest that human-predator conflict in this area is more complex than the direct financial loss from depredation. Hence, reducing depredation rates alone is unlikely to change farmer tolerance of wildlife on farmlands. Improved, responsible farm management, including self-responsibility for livestock rearing, and positive appreciation for wildlife are necessary. The NOTUGRE cheetah population requires further research to understand possible threats to the population. Furthermore, a better understanding of the connectivity between cheetahs of NOTUGRE, South Africa and Zimbabwe is required. The number of cheetahs within NOTUGRE is too small to sustain a viable population, hence conserving cheetahs outside of the protected area should be a priority for the conservation of the population. This can only be achieved through assistance and involvement from national authorities, local people and conservation organisations.
62

Resource limitation and population ecology of white-eared kob

Fryxell, John M. January 1985 (has links)
In this study I examine the effect of seasonal resource limitation on the behaviour and population dynamics of white-eared kob, Kobus kob leucotis, in the Boma region of the southern Sudan. This population, numbering over 800,000, migrates seasonally between savannah grasslands in areas with low rainfall and ephemerally swamped grasslands in areas with high rainfall. The aims of the study were: (1) to examine whether kob migration tracks ephemeral distributions of food or water resources, (2) to test the hypothesis that the Boma kob population is limited by food availability, (3) to determine if calf production is cued to seasonal peaks in food abundance, and (4) to evaluate the effect of breeding synchrony on lekking behavior and male competition. Seasonal climatic changes produced pronounced changes in the distribution and abundance of both green forage and water supplies. Dry season migration primarily tracked limited supplies of water. Within the dry season range, kob aggregated at high densities (over 1,000 per km²) in low-lying meadows that supported grass re-growth when little green grass was available elsewhere in the ecosystem. However, southerly movements in the wet season were not explainable by the resource hypothesis, since both food and water were widely distributed during the wet season. I suggest that kob may move southward in order to avoid surface flooding during the wet season. Kob mortality during the dry seasons of 1982 and 1983 was considerably higher than estimated mortality during the wet season. Unusual rainfall during the dry season of 1982 provided a "natural experiment" to test the food limitation hypothesis. Adult mortality was significantly lower during the dry season of 1982 than during the more typical dry season of 1983. Calf mortality did not vary significantly between years. Adult mortality rates were related to dry season duration. Dry season mortality was related to sub-maintenance food intake and declining fat reserves. The age structure of the kob population in 1983 suggests that large-scale mortality (ca. 40%) occurred in the 1980 drought that immediately preceded this study. These findings support the food limitation hypothesis. Kob exhibited a 4 month period of calf production during the late wet season, when food availability was highest. As a consequence, females continued lactation through the dry season period of food scarcity. I suggest that kob reproductive phenology may result from an obligatory delay during which females restore their fat reserves prior to calving or selection pressures imposed by predation during the vulnerable post-partum period. Synchronous breeding in the Boma kob was related to increased rates of aggression between males and increased color dimorphism, in comparison to the asynchronous breeding Uganda kob, Kobus kob thomasi. Male aggression served not only to establish dominance relations between males on leks, but also disrupted the mating activities of neighboring males. Young adult males suffered higher age-specific mortality than females, possibly resulting from injuries incurred during strenuous fighting on leks. In order to analyze the age structure of the kob population, I devised a new method for estimating age-specific mortality rates that is free of the restrictive assumptions that underlie most conventional techniques. The proposed method has somewhat greater sampling variation, but is considerably more robust, than two current methods. Moreover, the proposed method permits calculation of age-specific mortality at frequent intervals during periods of population fluctuation and, under some circumstances, population numerical trends may be directly determined from age structure. / Science, Faculty of / Zoology, Department of / Graduate
63

Potential beaver colony density in parts of Québec

Cotton, Fay Ellen 14 April 2009 (has links)
Three sets of linear regression models relating vegetation and hydrographic variables to observed beaver colony densities were developed for 3 study areas in Quebec where the effects of trapping on beaver densities were considered negligible. The first two study areas were located in mature northern hardwood forest. This research focused principally on the first study area, Papineau-Labelle Wildlife Reserve, where beaver colony density and habitat variables were studied at a 1:20,000 scale on 20 4-sq-km sample plots. Over 700 habitat variables were collected and generated from forest inventory maps, a computerized forest stand database, and base maps using a digitizer, microcomputer, mainframe and SAS programs. From the set of 32 models presented, the model explaining the most variation (95%) showed that beaver colony densities increased with density of stream length between 2% and 6% gradient and amount of wetland broadleaf cover forest area and decreased with forest stand area between 60 and 100 years of age. A set of decision rules was developed to help managers select the best model for determining beaver colony density according to availability, effort needed to measure and generalizability of the habitat information, and according to desired precision of the estimation. The model explaining the most variation (62%) in beaver colony numbers with the least measurement effort used total stream length measured from maps with the line intercept method. In the second study area, Gatineau Park, hydrographic and shoreline vegetation variables in 63 4-sq-km quadrats were examined. The model explaining the most variation (35%) in beaver colony numbers showed that beaver colony densities increased with density of stream length in the 1 % to 10% gradient class. The third study area was located in the boreal forest of the St. Lawrence North Shore area and included 49 trapping units in which the effects of trapping on colony densities was considered negligible. Beaver density on the traplines was related to % cover as portrayed on 1: 50,000 scale MER summary forest inventory maps. Of the set of 4 models retained, the model explaining the most variation (61 %) in beaver colony numbers showed that beaver colony densities increased with the area of young broadleaf cover and the burnt area. In the 2 mature northern hardwood study areas, hydrographic characteristics seemed to explain beaver colony density variations, whereas in the boreal forest where clearcutting and fires disturbed the forest, a significant portion of beaver colony density variation seemed to be explained by food abundance differences. The sets of models in Papineau-Labelle and the St. Lawrence North Shore are considered of potential use to furbearer managers in Quebec because they provide a relatively low cost means to determine potential beaver colony densities. / Master of Science
64

The determination of acceptable Hippopotamus (Hippopotamus, Amphibius, Linn.) densities in the Crocodile River, outside the Kruger National Park

Eksteen, J.J. January 1993 (has links)
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree Master of Science in Quantitative Conservation Biology, 1993 / The aim of the study was to provide a basis for the determination of acceptable hippo densities along the Crocodile River, outside the Kruger National Park. Hippo densities have to be acceptable to land-user~, who suffer hippo damage, and to the conservation authority, responsible for the resources along the river. Hippo nllmbers and distribution in the study area were determined by using a combination of aerial census and ground count. The hippo population number was estimated at 88 animals. Hippo distribution was influenced by flow speed of water. No hippos were observed in river sections with steep gradients, (>6.0 m/km) , while major herds were observed at low gradients «3.5 m/km). A mean density of 0.6 hippo per km was calculated, with a maximum of 2,5 hLppoe Zkm at Kaapmuiden, next to the Kruger National Park. TPA Nature Conservation records on hippo complaints were analyzed, and no relationship between the occurrence of hippo damage and hippo density could be found. There were strong indications that hippo damage are caused by individual problem hippo , The majority of land-users (92 %) supported the conservation of hippos. The size of the area available to hippo was determined for distances of 5 kn. up- and downriver from the major hippo herds. hippo could move away from the river was 336 restriction when compared to the generally assumed hippo grazing range of 3.2 km. Hippo access to grazing was assessed by determining the effective grazing area. / MT2017
65

A estrutura populacional da quiropterofauna em sub-bosque florestal: o uso da amostragem sistemática / Bats population structure in understory forest: use of systematic sampling

Lazo, Lizie Jatkoske 21 September 2011 (has links)
Os métodos de amostragem por conveniência procuram maximizar o volume das amostras e podem, neste sentido, ser bastante eficazes, porém, o esperado é que venham a comprometer a acurácia e a precisão na representação de espécies em sub-bosque floretal. Isto se deve ao fato dos pesquisadores, usualmente, alocarem as redes-neblina em locais conhecidos por atrair uma maior abundância de animais e onde estes apresentariam uma redução em sua habilidade para detectar e se esquivar à rede-neblina, como em rotas de voo, fontes alimentares e abrigos. A alocação determinística das redes pode, desta forma, resultar em um elevado viés amostral, caracterizado pela superamostragem de algumas espécies que, frequentemente, utilizam estes espaços, em detrimento daquelas que, ao contrário, estariam sendo sub-representadas por não os utilizarem na mesma proporção. Baseado nisto, este estudo teve por principal objetivo o desenvolvimento de método padronizado, que pudesse elevar a acurácia e a precisão na obtenção de dados populacionais de quirópteros em sub-bosque florestal, com foco na amostragem sistemática. Como procedimentos metodológicos, uma área amostral de 8,82 ha foi delimitada em três fragmentos florestais, no interior do estado de São Paulo, dos tipos vegetacionais cerradão (22º15\'S e 47º39\'W), floresta estacional semidecidual (22º09\'S e 47º33\'W) e eucalipto (22º11\'S e 47º39\'W), para o que um conjunto móvel de doze redes-neblina foi utilizado na captura e recaptura dos quirópteros, no período de jul/2009 a jun/2010, totalizando um esforço amostral de 155.520 h.m2. A taxa de detecção das redes-neblina foi estimada, através de observações em tempo real, e utilizada na correção das estimativas populacionais. A habilidade de detecção e esquiva à captura foi elevada, porém, não diferiu do observado nas rotas de voo, anteriormente demonstrado por estudos comportamentais. O resultado disto foi o registro de quatorze espécies e, pela correção das estimativas, Desmodus rotundus foi a dominante na região e no eucalipto, enquanto que Micronycteris microtis foi a espécie mais abundante no cerradão e, Glossophaga soricina, na floresta estacional semidecidual. A abundância da Carollia perspicillata não foi corrigida, devido a sua elevada taxa de recaptura atribuída à redução na habilidade para detectar as redes, levando a uma redução de sua importância, dentre as espécies dominantes, na região e nos fragmentos de vegetação nativa. De forma inovadora, foi possível estimar o índice de densidade e o padrão de distribuição populacionais, e, ainda, dada a padronização espacial, compreender a influência de aspectos como a altitude e a declividade do solo, a densidade da vegetação, a presença e a altura do dossel florestal, sobre as populações de quirópteros. Assim, foi concluído que a amostragem sistemática pode ser mais acurada e precisa para os estudos populacionais por reduzir os vieses amostrais dos métodos de amostragem por conveniência, aumentar nossa compreenção sobre os parâmetros populacionais e a forma com que os quirópteros interagem com o ecossistema florestal, e potencializar a comparação de dados em diferentes situações e localidades. / Bats population convenience sampling methods mostly focus on maximizing sample volumes. This method can be highly effective in delivering significant number of samples, but on the other hand can potentially compromise accuracy and precision in representation of species potentially available in understory forests. This is due to the fact that researchers tend to position mist-nets according to known places by attracting greater abundance of bats and where its might be less attentive to the presence of mist-nets, such as bats flyways, food sources and shelters. However, the deterministic approach for mist-nets placement allocation may lead to a misrepresentation of the species in specific habitats and result in oversampling of the species that usually occur in those places. Based on this, the key objective of this study was to develop an standardized protocol that enhances accuracy and precision when collecting bat samples in understory forest, with focus on the evaluation of the systematic sampling. An sample area of 8.82 ha was delimited in three forest fragments within São Paulo State. These were of the vegetation types of cerradao (22º15\'S to 47º39\'W), semideciduous florest (22º09\'S to 47º33\'W) and forestation of eucalyptus (22º11\'S to 47º39\'W). A mobile set of twelve mist-nets was used to capture and recapture of bats from the Jul/2009 to Jun/2010, totaling a sampling effort of 155,520 h.m2. The detectation rate of mist-net of bats was estimated by observations in real time and was used to obtain correct population estimates. The ability of bats to detect and evade capture was hight, but consistent with observed for the flyways, earlier demonstrated by behavioral studies. The result of this was fourteen species recorded in the understory of the different forest fragments, and through the correctness of the estimates, the Desmodus rotundus was dominant in the region and in eucalyptus, while Micronycteris microtis was the most abundant specie in the cerradao and Glossophaga soricina in the semideciduous forest. The abundance of the Carollia perspicillata has not been corrected, due to its hight rate of recapture what was possibly the result of a reduced ability to detect the mist-net, leading to a reduction in your importance amoung the dominant species in the region and fragments of native vegetation. The proposed systematic design innovated and led to enhanced accuracy and precision, beyond to enable the estimate density level and the population distribution patterns. Thus, the spatial standardization in allocation mist-nets provides far representation of the influence of all habitat conditions on the bat populations, such as altitude and slope soil, vegetation density, presence and height of the forest canopy. Therefore, the overall conclusion was that the systematic sampling can be more accurate and precise for bats population studies by reduce convenience sampling methods biases, increase the understanding bats interaction with the forest ecosystem and the potentiate data comparation in different situations and localizations.
66

Optimising camera trap density and position to determine medium and large mammal species richness and occupancy on the Cape Peninsula, South Africa

Colyn, Robin January 2016 (has links)
Thesis (MTech (Nature Conservation))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2016. / Largely due to anthropogenic causes, biodiversity and particularly species diversity is changing at an extraordinary rate, with declines in species abundance, community composition and extinction risk being of crucial concern. Monitoring of state variables of biodiversity such as species richness and occupancy are of significant importance in determining the severity of threats placed on species, populations and communities. As a non-invasive monitoring method camera traps are noted as being an effective, accurate and rapid means of compiling species richness estimates of medium to large terrestrial mammals. However, crucial elements of camera trap survey design are rarely empirically addressed, which has questioned the need for a standardised camera trapping protocol. Table Mountain National Park (TMNP) is a protected area that is under serious anthropogenic pressure through urban and peri-urban development. Although it is the last refuge for a number of large mammal species on the Cape Peninsula, current mammalian species richness knowledge within the TMNP are limited. Accurate and current species richness estimates are therefore needed within TMNP and more specifically the Cape of Good Hope (CoGH), which exclusively hosts a number of medium and large mammal species. The aims of this study were to optimise a camera survey protocol for the Peninsula region, with a focus on camera density, placement and survey duration that will enable accurate estimations of medium to large mammal species richness and occupancy.
67

Caribou, climate change and the pre-contact Yup'ik : the isotope ecology and biogeography of a key subsistence species

Gigleux, Ciara Ann Mannion January 2018 (has links)
Rangifer have the greatest circumpolar distribution of any living ungulate and have played an important role in the lives of many Arctic Indigenous communities for thousands of years. Given the prolific nature of Rangifer remains in many Arctic archaeological contexts, and their continued importance in many contemporary Arctic Indigenous societies, this species has the potential to be an important source of information about past Arctic human-animal-environment interactions. Given the noted influence of local and global climatic shifts on Rangifer ecology in the present, knowledge of the palaeoecology and palaeobiogeography of such a key prey-species, coupled with an indication of palaeoclimatic context, may provide valuable insights into animal-human interactions, human subsistence activities and landscape use in the past. The aims of this thesis are three-fold. The first is to explore Rangifer isotopic variability, and to indicate the utility of this species as a palaeoclimatic proxy, by isotopically analysing modern samples from across the circumpolar North. The second aim is to investigate the palaeoecology and palaeobiogeography of caribou from the pre-contact Little Ice Age (15th–17th century AD) Yup'ik village site of Nunalleq, Western Alaska, in order to determine their ranging patterns and to identify if these patterns are similar to those seen in modern caribou in the area today. The third aim brings both of these aims together in order to undertake the first multi-isotopic investigation of archaeological Rangifer in North America to provide an indication of the palaeoenvironmental and palaeoclimatic context of Nunalleq. This information, in conjunction with the caribou palaeoecological and palaeogeographical knowledge, will inform on caribou-environment and caribou-human interactions at the site. To that end, bulk bone bioapatite δ18OCO3 and δ18OPO4, and bulk bone collagen δ13C, δ15N and δ34S isotope analysis is undertaken on Rangifer from five modern herds from across the circumpolar North to explore the relationships between stable isotope ratios and environmental factors. The data presented here suggest that Rangifer bioapatite δ18O is a potentially useful proxy for regional climate. Intra and inter-population variability in these isotopic systems suggests the potential of using these to distinguish between herds and environments, particularly δ18O and δ34S. Sequential strontium (87Sr/86Sr) and oxygen (δ18OCO3) isotope data from caribou (Rangifer sp.) tooth enamel from Nunalleq are analysed in order to reconstruct caribou movement patterns in this region during the Little Ice Age. The data presented here suggests these Nunalleq caribou undertook some seasonal movements. Comparison with observational data of the local herd in the region today suggests a shift in calving area and range use between the late Holocene period represented by the site and the present day. Finally, bulk bone bioapatite δ18OPO4 and bulk bone collagen δ13C and δ15N on caribou from the site are used to reconstruct palaeotemperature for the area surrounding Nunalleq and to inform on additional palaeoenvironmental considerations. The data generated in this thesis provide new empirical data for future research in isotope zooarchaeology and significant baseline data for use in palaeodietary and palaeoenvironmental interpretation of fossil Rangifer. The isotopic data complement the wealth of data derived from other research at Nunalleq, illuminating the influence of changing climatic conditions on prey-species palaeoecology and human–animal interactions at the site.
68

A estrutura populacional da quiropterofauna em sub-bosque florestal: o uso da amostragem sistemática / Bats population structure in understory forest: use of systematic sampling

Lizie Jatkoske Lazo 21 September 2011 (has links)
Os métodos de amostragem por conveniência procuram maximizar o volume das amostras e podem, neste sentido, ser bastante eficazes, porém, o esperado é que venham a comprometer a acurácia e a precisão na representação de espécies em sub-bosque floretal. Isto se deve ao fato dos pesquisadores, usualmente, alocarem as redes-neblina em locais conhecidos por atrair uma maior abundância de animais e onde estes apresentariam uma redução em sua habilidade para detectar e se esquivar à rede-neblina, como em rotas de voo, fontes alimentares e abrigos. A alocação determinística das redes pode, desta forma, resultar em um elevado viés amostral, caracterizado pela superamostragem de algumas espécies que, frequentemente, utilizam estes espaços, em detrimento daquelas que, ao contrário, estariam sendo sub-representadas por não os utilizarem na mesma proporção. Baseado nisto, este estudo teve por principal objetivo o desenvolvimento de método padronizado, que pudesse elevar a acurácia e a precisão na obtenção de dados populacionais de quirópteros em sub-bosque florestal, com foco na amostragem sistemática. Como procedimentos metodológicos, uma área amostral de 8,82 ha foi delimitada em três fragmentos florestais, no interior do estado de São Paulo, dos tipos vegetacionais cerradão (22º15\'S e 47º39\'W), floresta estacional semidecidual (22º09\'S e 47º33\'W) e eucalipto (22º11\'S e 47º39\'W), para o que um conjunto móvel de doze redes-neblina foi utilizado na captura e recaptura dos quirópteros, no período de jul/2009 a jun/2010, totalizando um esforço amostral de 155.520 h.m2. A taxa de detecção das redes-neblina foi estimada, através de observações em tempo real, e utilizada na correção das estimativas populacionais. A habilidade de detecção e esquiva à captura foi elevada, porém, não diferiu do observado nas rotas de voo, anteriormente demonstrado por estudos comportamentais. O resultado disto foi o registro de quatorze espécies e, pela correção das estimativas, Desmodus rotundus foi a dominante na região e no eucalipto, enquanto que Micronycteris microtis foi a espécie mais abundante no cerradão e, Glossophaga soricina, na floresta estacional semidecidual. A abundância da Carollia perspicillata não foi corrigida, devido a sua elevada taxa de recaptura atribuída à redução na habilidade para detectar as redes, levando a uma redução de sua importância, dentre as espécies dominantes, na região e nos fragmentos de vegetação nativa. De forma inovadora, foi possível estimar o índice de densidade e o padrão de distribuição populacionais, e, ainda, dada a padronização espacial, compreender a influência de aspectos como a altitude e a declividade do solo, a densidade da vegetação, a presença e a altura do dossel florestal, sobre as populações de quirópteros. Assim, foi concluído que a amostragem sistemática pode ser mais acurada e precisa para os estudos populacionais por reduzir os vieses amostrais dos métodos de amostragem por conveniência, aumentar nossa compreenção sobre os parâmetros populacionais e a forma com que os quirópteros interagem com o ecossistema florestal, e potencializar a comparação de dados em diferentes situações e localidades. / Bats population convenience sampling methods mostly focus on maximizing sample volumes. This method can be highly effective in delivering significant number of samples, but on the other hand can potentially compromise accuracy and precision in representation of species potentially available in understory forests. This is due to the fact that researchers tend to position mist-nets according to known places by attracting greater abundance of bats and where its might be less attentive to the presence of mist-nets, such as bats flyways, food sources and shelters. However, the deterministic approach for mist-nets placement allocation may lead to a misrepresentation of the species in specific habitats and result in oversampling of the species that usually occur in those places. Based on this, the key objective of this study was to develop an standardized protocol that enhances accuracy and precision when collecting bat samples in understory forest, with focus on the evaluation of the systematic sampling. An sample area of 8.82 ha was delimited in three forest fragments within São Paulo State. These were of the vegetation types of cerradao (22º15\'S to 47º39\'W), semideciduous florest (22º09\'S to 47º33\'W) and forestation of eucalyptus (22º11\'S to 47º39\'W). A mobile set of twelve mist-nets was used to capture and recapture of bats from the Jul/2009 to Jun/2010, totaling a sampling effort of 155,520 h.m2. The detectation rate of mist-net of bats was estimated by observations in real time and was used to obtain correct population estimates. The ability of bats to detect and evade capture was hight, but consistent with observed for the flyways, earlier demonstrated by behavioral studies. The result of this was fourteen species recorded in the understory of the different forest fragments, and through the correctness of the estimates, the Desmodus rotundus was dominant in the region and in eucalyptus, while Micronycteris microtis was the most abundant specie in the cerradao and Glossophaga soricina in the semideciduous forest. The abundance of the Carollia perspicillata has not been corrected, due to its hight rate of recapture what was possibly the result of a reduced ability to detect the mist-net, leading to a reduction in your importance amoung the dominant species in the region and fragments of native vegetation. The proposed systematic design innovated and led to enhanced accuracy and precision, beyond to enable the estimate density level and the population distribution patterns. Thus, the spatial standardization in allocation mist-nets provides far representation of the influence of all habitat conditions on the bat populations, such as altitude and slope soil, vegetation density, presence and height of the forest canopy. Therefore, the overall conclusion was that the systematic sampling can be more accurate and precise for bats population studies by reduce convenience sampling methods biases, increase the understanding bats interaction with the forest ecosystem and the potentiate data comparation in different situations and localizations.
69

Population modelling the yellow-footed rock-wallaby (petrogale xanthopus xanthopus) in space and time

Lethbridge, Mark January 2004 (has links)
Conservation biology is primarily concerned with the amelioration of species decline. The Yellow-footed Rock-wallaby (Petrogale xanthopus xanthopus) is a medium-sized Macropod that inhabits the semiarid rangelands of South Australia and New South Wales. Its conservation status is Vulnerable C2a(i). In this study, population modelling, spatially explicit habitat modelling and Population Viability Analysis (PVA) have been used to better understand the factors that affect the abundance and distribution of the P. x. xanthopus in South Australia. The processes that drive the population dynamics of a species operate at different scales. As such this research involves a collection of several inter-related and scale-specific empirical studies that provide insights about the population dynamics of P. x. xanthopus. Each of these studies captures environmental, demographic and behavioural process acting on the population at different scales. These include the analysis of relative abundance data derived from an aerial census, mark recapture sampling of demographic parameters in relation to rainfall patterns and a collection of habitat models derived at different scales using presence-absence data. Spatially explicit PVAs enable the population dynamics of a species to be modelled in space and time. Using these data, a PVA is conducted to explore and rank the importance of the factors that threaten this species and help guide their future monitoring and management. Movement is also a key issue when considering problems such as isolation and inbreeding. Given that little is known about the dispersal behaviour of this species, a range of different dispersal behaviours are also simulated in the PVA using random and non-random mating algorithms, to estimate the potential for inbreeding. / thesis (PhD)--University of South Australia, 2004.
70

Environmental stochasticity and density dependence in animal population models

Samaranayaka, Ari, n/a January 2006 (has links)
Biological management of populations plays an indispensable role in all areas of population biology. In deciding between possible management options, one of the most important pieces of information required by population managers is the likely population status under possible management actions. Population dynamic models are the basic tool used in deriving this information. These models elucidate the complex processes underlying the population dynamics, and address the possible consequences/merits of management actions. These models are needed to guide the population towards desired/chosen management goals, and therefore allow managers to make informed decisions between alternative management actions. The reliability that can be placed on inferences drawn from a model about the fate of a population is undoubtedly dependent on how realistically the model represents the dynamic process of the population. The realistic representation of population characteristics in models has proved to be somewhat of a thorn in the side of population biologists. This thesis focuses in particular on ways to represent environmental stochasticity and density dependence in population models. Various approaches that are used in building environmental stochasticity into population models are reviewed. The most common approach represents the environmental variation by changes to demographic parameters that are assumed to follow a simple statistical distribution. For this purpose, a distribution is often selected on the basis of expert opinion, previous practice, and convenience. This thesis assesses the effect of this subjective choice of distribution on the model predictions, and develops some objective criteria for that selection based on ecological and statistical acceptability. The more commonly used distributions are compared as to their suitability, and some recommendations are made. Density dependence is usually represented in population models by specifying one or more of the vital rates as a function of population density. For a number of reasons, a population-specific function cannot usually be selected based on data. The thesis develops some ecologically-motivated criteria for identifying possible function(s) that could be used for a given population by matching functional properties to population characteristics when they are known. It also identifies a series of properties that should be present in a general function which could be suitable for modelling a population when relevant population characteristics are unknown. The suitability of functions that are commonly chosen for such purposes is assessed on this basis. I also evaluate the effect of the choice of a function on the resulting population trajectories. The case where the density dependence of one demographic rate is influenced by the density dependence of another is considered in some detail, as in some situations it can be modelled with little information in a relatively function-insensitive way. The findings of this research will help in embedding characteristics of animal populations into population dynamics models more realistically. Even though the findings are presented in the context of slow-growing long-lived animal populations, they are more generally applicable in all areas of biological management.

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