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Determinants of native and exotic plant species diversity and composition in remnant oak savannas on southeastern Vancouver IslandLilley, Patrick Ledford 05 1900 (has links)
Many regional and local factors can influence the distribution of native and exotic species in ecological communities. I examined the regional- and local-scale determinants of native and exotic vascular plant species richness and composition in a highly fragmented oak savanna ecosystem on southeastern Vancouver Island. In sharp contrast to most reported results, I found a negative relationship between native and exotic richness at the regional scale, and no relationship at the local scale. Two extrinsic factors, surrounding road density and climate, best explained the regional-scale relationship by each affecting natives and exotics in opposite ways. Road density and climate were also the dominant predictors of native and exotic composition at the regional scale. Patterns in the patch occupancy of individual species confirmed the importance of these factors but I found that low surrounding road densities and cool, wet conditions predicted the presence of many natives and the absence of many exotics. Environmental factors explained variation in richness and composition at the local scale, but these factors were different for natives and exotics. My results suggest that natives and exotics respond to roads and climate in fundamentally different ways. Roads increase both exotic propagule pressure and disturbance, which may facilitate exotic invasion. In contrast, disturbance from roads may increase the likelihood of local extinction for particular natives. Differing climatic preferences within the native and exotic species pools may also partially explain the observed patterns. There was no evidence that native diversity directly affects exotic diversity (or vice versa). Surprisingly, I found that connectivity was not an important predictor of richness or composition despite the high degree of habitat fragmentation in this ecosystem. / Science, Faculty of / Botany, Department of / Graduate
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Effets des plantes exotiques et envahissantes sur la diversité et la composition de boisés urbains dans la grande région métropolitaine de MontréalGélinas-Lemay, Roxanne 04 1900 (has links)
La hausse de l’urbanisation et la hausse d’introduction des espèces exotiques qui l’accompagne sont parmi les plus grands risques pour la biodiversité. Les espèces exotiques peuvent non seulement affecter la diversité alpha et réduire les populations d’espèces indigènes, mais également entrainer des changements de la biodiversité bêta. Toutefois, ces phénomènes sont complexes et la littérature sur le sujet présente des résultats variés. C’est pourquoi le but de cette recherche est d’étudier l’influence des espèces exotiques et envahissantes sur la diversité alpha et bêta de 61 boisés urbains de la grande région de Montréal. Nos résultats ont montré que les espèces envahissantes ont un effet plus grand que les espèces non envahissantes sur la diversité alpha. Elles sont toutes deux associées à une hausse de la richesse totale et de la diversité alpha. Toutefois, une hausse du couvert des espèces envahissantes est associée à une diminution de la richesse et du couvert des espèces indigènes. Nos résultats ont également montré qu’un grand couvert en espèces envahissantes provoque des changements significatifs de la diversité bêta en réduisant la différence entre les sites. À l’opposé, lorsque la richesse en espèces exotiques est grande, nous avons observé une différenciation en espèces indigènes qui serait expliquée par la diminution de leur richesse. Pour finir, nous avons constaté que les espèces exotiques et envahissantes sont associées à un changement significatif de la composition en espèces. Nos résultats suggèrent que les espèces exotiques, tout particulièrement les espèces envahissantes, sont associées à des changements importants de la diversité des boisés urbains. Toutefois, des études supplémentaires sont nécessaires pour confirmer si elles sont responsables de ces changements ou simplement le symptôme de perturbations sous-jacentes. / Urbanization and exotic species introduction associated with it are among the most important causes of the current biodiversity crisis. These disturbances are associated with a decrease in native species alpha diversity and with changes in beta diversity worldwide. However, those changes are complex, and studies on this subject show mixed results. Consequently, the impact of exotic species on native flora is still up for debate. In this context, we aimed to study the relationship between exotic and invasive species on the diversity of 61 forest patches in the Metropolitan region of Montreal. Our analysis showed that invasive species had slightly more impact on native diversity than non-invasive ones. However, the effects of invasive and non-invasive species were similar. They both added to the total richness, and their richness was associated with an increase of alpha diversity. They were also associated with a decrease in native species cover and the invasive species with a reduction of native richness. We also found that a high cover in exotic species, especially invasive ones induced homogenization in urban forest patches. However, at high richness, they tend to induce differentiation in native species beta diversity, caused by a decrease in native species richness. Finally, we found that exotic species induce significant changes to the species composition of the forest patches. Our results suggest that exotic species, especially invasive ones, are associated with significant changes in urban forest diversity. However, further research is needed to verify if they are direct actors in those changes or symptoms of underlying disturbances.
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A Multiscale Spatial Analysis of Oak Openings Plant Diversity with Implications for Conservation and ManagementSchetter, Timothy Andrew 11 April 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Alien invaders and reptile traders : risk assessment and modelling of trends, vectors and traits influencing introduction and establishment of alien reptiles and amphibiansVan Wilgen, Nicola Jane 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2010. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Biological invasions are a growing threat to biodiversity, trade and agriculture in South Africa.
Though alien reptiles and amphibians (herpetofauna) are not currently a major issue, escalating
problems worldwide and increased trade in South Africa suggest a possible increase in future
problems. In this thesis I explore practical measures for risk assessment implementable under
national legislation. I began by documenting record-keeping and legislative differences between
provinces in South Africa. This revealed some serious deficiencies, complicating attempts to
compile accurate inventories and discern import trends. International trade data, however,
revealed an exponential increase in the number of imports to South Africa over the last 30 years.
Characterising the abundance of species in this trade is important as species introduced in large
numbers pose a higher establishment risk. In South Africa, I found a tendency for venomous and
expensive species to be traded in low numbers, whereas species that are easy to breed and handle,
or that are colourful or patterned are traded in higher numbers.
Unlike South Africa, California and Florida have had a large number of well-documented
herpetofaunal introductions. These introductions were used to verify the role of several key
predictors in species establishment. I first evaluated the role of each variable separately. I
examined different approaches for bioclimatic modelling, the predictive power of different sources
of distribution data, and methods of assigning a climate-match score. I also present the first test of
Darwin’s naturalization hypothesis for land vertebrates using two new phylogenies inferred for
native and introduced reptiles in California and Florida. I then used boosted regression trees (BRT)
to infer the relative contribution of each factor to species establishment success. Results from the
BRTs were incorporated into a user-friendly spreadsheet model for use by assessors inexperienced in
complex modelling techniques.
Introduction effort was found to be the strongest contributor to establishment success.
Furthermore, species with short juvenile periods were more likely to establish than species that
started breeding later, as were species with more distant relatives in regional biotas. Average
climate match and life form were also important. Of the herpetofaunal groups, frogs and lizards
were most likely to establish, while snakes and turtles established at much lower rates, though
analysis of all recorded herpetofaunal introductions shows slightly different patterns. Predictions
made by the BRT model to independent data were relatively poor, though this is unlikely to be
unique to this study and can be partially explained by missing data. Though numerous uncertainties
remain in this field, many can be lessened by applying case by case rules rather than generalising
across all herpetofaunal groups. The purpose for import and potential trade volume of a species will
influence the threat it poses. Considering this in conjunction with a species’ environmental
tolerances and previous success of species with similar life histories, should provide a reasonable
and defendable estimate of establishment risk. Finally, a brief summary of the potential impacts of
introduced alien herpetofauna is provided in the thesis. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Indringer spesies hou ‘n al groter bedreiging in vir die biodiversiteit, handel en landbou van Suid-
Afrika. Alhoewel uitheemse reptiele en amfibieërs (herpetofauna) tans nie ‘n groot bedreiging in
Suid-Afrika is nie, dui groeiende probleme wêreldwyd asook 'n toename in plaaslike handel op
moontlike toekomstige probleme. In hierdie tesis, ondersoek ek praktiese metodes vir risikobepaling
wat onder nasionale wetgewing toegepas kan word. Ek begin deur die verskille in stoor van rekords
en wetgewing tussen provinsies te dokumenteer. Hierdie proses het ernstige tekortkominge
uitgewys, wat pogings om akkurate inventarisse saam te stel en invoertendense te bepaal,
bemoeilik. Internasionale handelsdata het egter getoon dat daar ‘n eksponensiële toename in die
hoeveelheid invoere na Suid-Afrika oor die laaste 30 jaar was. Die hoeveelheid spesies in hierdie
handel is belangrik omdat spesies wat in groot hoeveelhede ingevoer word, ‘n hoër vestigingsrisiko
het. In Suid-Afrika is ‘n tendens gevind vir handel in giftige en duur spesies teen lae hoeveelhede,
terwyl spesies wat maklik teel, maklik hanteer kan word en kleurvol is of mooi patrone het, in
groter hoeveelhede mee handel gedryf word.
Kalifornië and Florida, in teenstelling met Suid-Afrika, het ‘n hoë aantal goed-gedokumenteerde
gevalle van herpetofauna wat in die natuur vrygestel is. Hierdie introduksies was gebruik om die rol
van verskeie belangrike faktore in die vestiging van populasies te bepaal. Eerstens het ek die rol van
elke faktor apart ondersoek. Ek het verskillende benaderinge vir bioklimatiese model-bou
ondersoek, die akuraatheid van verskillende bronne van distribusiedata getoets en drie metodes om
‘n “climate match score” te bereken, voorgestel. Ek bied ook die eerste toets van Darwin se
naturalisasie-hipotese vir landwerveldiere aan, deur gebruik te maak van twee nuwe filogenieë wat
ek gebou het vir inheemse en ingevoerde reptiele in Kalifornië en Florida. Ek het verder gebruik
gemaak van “boosted regression trees” (BRT) om die relatiewe bydrae van elke faktor tot die
vestigings-potensiaal van spesies te bepaal. Resultate van hierdie BRTs was ingekorporeerd in ‘n
gebruikersvriendelike ontledingstaat wat deur bestuurders, onervare in komplekse
modelboutegnieke, gebruik kan word.
Invoer-hoeveelheid was die faktor wat die sterktste bygedra het tot suksesvolle vestiging. Verder is
spesies met kort jeugperiodes en dié met verlangse familie in streeks-biotas, meer geskik om
suksesvol te vestig. Gemiddelde klimaatooreenstemming en lewensvorm was ook belangrik. Paddas
en akkedisse was die mees waarskynlikste van die herpetofauna groepe om populasies te vestig,
terwyl slange en skilpaaie teen laer tempo’s populasies gevestig het, alhoewel analise van alle
gedokumenteerde gevalle van herpetofauna-invoerings wêreldwyd effens verskillende tendense
toon. Voorspellings wat deur die BRT-model vir onafhangklike data gemaak is was redelik swak,
alhoewel hierdie resultaat onwaarskynlik nie uniek aan die studie is nie, en word gedeeltelik
verduidelik deur die gebrek aan data. Alhoewel talle onsekerhede steeds bestaan, kan dié
verminder word deur geval-tot-geval reëls toe te pas eerder as om vir herpetofauna as ‘n groep te
veralgemeen. Die doel van invoer en potensiële handel-volumes van ‘n spesie, sal die bedreiging
wat die spesie toon, bepaal. Hierdie faktore moet saam met omgewingstoleransie en voorafgaande
sukses van spesies met soortgelyke lewenswyses oorweeg word, om ‘n aanvaarbare en verdedigbare
beraming van vestigingsrisiko te gee. Laastens, word ‘n kort opsomming van die effekte wat
uitheemse herpetofauna mag hê, verskaf.
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Impacts de l'urbanisation sur la diversité spécifique et fonctionnelle dans les forêts riverainesBrice, Marie-Hélène 06 1900 (has links)
L'urbanisation représente une menace majeure pour la biodiversité. Ce mémoire de maîtrise vise à comprendre ses effets sur la composition fonctionnelle et l'homogénéisation biotique dans les forêts riveraines. Des inventaires floristiques ont été réalisés dans 57 forêts riveraines de la région de Montréal.
Afin d'étudier la variation de la composition fonctionnelle avec l'urbanisation, des moyennes pondérées de traits par communauté ont été calculées pour les arbres, arbustes et herbacées. Chaque forêt a été caractérisée par des variables relatives au paysage urbain environnant, aux conditions locales des forêts et aux processus spatiaux. Les conditions locales, notamment les inondations, exerçaient une pression de sélection dominante sur les traits. L'effet du paysage était indirect, agissant via l'altération des régimes hydrologiques. La dispersion le long des rivières était aussi un processus important dans la structuration des forêts riveraines.
Les changements dans la diversité β taxonomique et fonctionnelle des herbacées ont été étudiés entre trois niveaux d'urbanisation et d'inondation. Alors que l'urbanisation a favorisé une différenciation taxonomique, les inondations ont favorisé une homogénéisation taxonomique, sans influencer la diversité β fonctionnelle. L'urbanisation était l'élément déclencheur des changements de la diversité β, directement, en causant un gain en espèces exotiques et une diminution de la richesse totale dans les forêts très urbanisées, et, indirectement, en entraînant un important turnover d'espèces par l'altération des régimes hydrologiques.
Globalement, ces résultats suggèrent que la modification des processus naturels par les activités anthropiques est le principal moteur de changements dans les communautés riveraines urbaines. / Urbanization is a major threat to biodiversity worldwide. This thesis aims at understanding its effects on plant functional composition and biotic homogenization in riparian forests. Floristic inventories were carried out in 57 riparian forests of the Montreal area.
To investigate changes in functional composition with urbanization, community weighted means were computed for trees, shrubs and herbs using eight functional traits. Each forest was characterized by variables related to the surrounding urban landscape, local forest conditions and spatial processes. The relative importance of these three subsets on the functional composition was quantified by variation partitioning using redundancy analyses. Local conditions, especially flood intensity, exerted an overriding selection pressure on riparian functional communities. The effect of the landscape was suspected to be indirect, acting on trait patterns likely through alteration of hydrological disturbances in riparian forests. In addition to environmental filtering, dispersal along rivers was also an important process structuring riparian forests.
Changes in taxonomic and functional β-diversity for herb species were studied between three urbanization and flood levels. While urbanization led to taxonomic differentiation, flood intensity fostered taxonomic homogenization, both without influence on functional β-diversity. Urbanization was the main trigger for all β-diversity changes, as it directly caused a gain in exotic species and a net species loss in highly urban forests, and indirectly fostered an important species turnover through alteration of the hydrological regime.
Overall, these results suggest that the alteration and interruption of natural landscape-scale processes by human activities are major mechanisms underlying changes in urban riparian communities.
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Ecological and Edaphic Correlations of Soil Invertebrate Community Structure in Dry Upland Forests of Eastern AfricaMauritsson, Karl January 2018 (has links)
Natural forests are characterised by great vegetation diversity and create habitats for a major part of Earth’s terrestrial organisms. Plantation forests, which are mainly composed of a few genera of fast-growing trees, constitute an increasing fraction of global forests, but they only partly compensate for loss of area, habitat and ecological functions in natural forests. Plantation forests established near natural forests can be expected to serve as buffers, but they seem to be relatively poor in invertebrate species and it is not clear why. This bachelor’s degree project aimed at establishing the ecological and edaphic factors that correlate with soil invertebrate diversity in dry upland forests and surrounding plantation forests in eastern Africa. Some aspects of the above-ground vegetation heterogeneity were investigated since this was assumed to influence the heterogeneity of the soil environment, which is considered as critical for soil biodiversity. The obtained knowledge may be valuable in conservation activities in East African forests, which are threatened by destruction, fragmentation and exotic species. The study area was Karura Forest, a dry upland forest in Nairobi, Kenya. Three different sites were investigated; a natural forest site characterized by the indigenous tree species Brachylaena huillensis and Croton megalocarpus, and two different plantation forest sites, characterized by the exotic species Cupressus lusitanica and Eucalyptus paniculata, respectively. For each forest type, six plots were visited. Soil invertebrates were extracted from collected soil and litter samples by sieving and Berlese-Tullgren funnels. The invertebrates were identified, and the taxonomic diversity calculated at the order level. The ecological and edaphic factors, measured or calculated for each plot, were tree species diversity, ratio of exotic tree species, vertical structure of trees, vegetation cover, vegetation density, litter quality, soil pH, soil temperature and soil moisture. One-way ANOVA was used to compare soil invertebrate diversity and other variables between different forest types. Akaike’s Information Criterion and Multiple Linear Regression were used to establish linear models with variables that could explain measured variations of the diversity. There was some evidence for higher soil invertebrate diversity in natural forests than in surrounding plantation forests. The abundance of soil invertebrates was also clearly higher in natural forests, which indicates that natural forests are more important than plantation forests for conservation of soil invertebrate populations. Soil invertebrate diversity (in terms of number of orders present) was found to be influenced by forest type and litter quality. The diversity was higher at places with high amounts of coarse litter, which here is considered as more heterogenous than fine litter. The dependence on forest type was partly a consequence of differences in soil pH since Eucalyptus trees lower soil pH and thereby also soil biodiversity. No relation to heterogeneity of above-ground vegetation was found. For future conservation activities in Karura Forest Reserve it is recommended to continue removing exotic plant species and replanting indigenous trees, to prioritize the removal of Eucalyptus trees before Cypress trees, to only remove a few trees at a time and to establish ground vegetation when doing so.
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Les espèces exotiques envahissantes et le droit de la mer : essai de qualification / Alien invasive species and the law of the sea : an attempt of classificationTeullet, Marie 23 October 2014 (has links)
Les espèces exotiques envahissantes sont un sujet de préoccupation grandissant, mais sont-elles,pour le droit international, un objet comme un autre ? Une espèce exotique envahissante a comme particularité d’être une espèce vivante qui, par sa seule présence dans un écosystème qui lui est étranger, va engendrer des effets délétères alors qu’elle n’en aurait causé aucun dans son écosystème d’origine. Le droit de la mer est-il armé pour répondre à cette menace ? La question de la qualification de leur atteinte en droit international et plus précisément en droit de la mer est autant novatrice que capitale. Le traitement juridique des espèces exotiques envahissantes a consisté, jusqu’à maintenant, à les rattacher de facto à la lutte pour la conservation de la diversité biologique sans même que soit posée la question, en amont, de leur qualification. Et si les espèces exotiques envahissantes étaient considérées comme une pollution ? Envisager cette hypothèse implique de procéder à une étude de fond tant des instruments de droit international, et de droit de la mer en particulier, que de la pollution marine. S’il est permis de reconnaître les espèces exotiques envahissantes comme étant une source de pollution, elle n’en reste pas moins une nouvelle forme de pollution encore jamais reconnue par les instruments de droit international : une pollution biologique. Cette pollution, autonome de celles déjà existant en droit international,impliquant la nécessité de repenser la définition de la pollution marine. / Alien invasive species are a growing concern, but are they an object as any other in international law ? An invasive alien species is a living species which, by its mere presence in an ecosystem outside its natural range, causes deleterious effects which is not the case in its native ecosystem. Is the law of the sea equipped to meet this new threat ? The classification of its effects in international law, and more specifically the law of the sea, is as innovative as capital. The legal treatment of invasive alien species so far has been tied to the struggle for the conservation of biological diversity without wondering, in advance, what its classification is. What if alien invasive species are considered pollution ? Considering this hypothesis means studying instruments of international law, and more precisely those of the law of the sea, as well as marine pollution. If one can allow to identify invasive alien species as a source of pollution, it remains a new form of pollution that has never been recognized before by the instruments of international law : a biological pollution. This pollution, independent of those already existing in international law, implies the need to rethink the definition of marine pollution.
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Soundscape dynamics in the social-ecological systems of Tierra del FuegoDante P Francomano (9738650) 14 December 2020 (has links)
<p>Human society is presently beset by an array of anthropogenic social-ecological crises that threaten the sustainability of the social-ecological systems that sustain our livelihoods. While research alone will not rectify these issues, it can help to answer key questions that must be addressed to develop effective solutions. To address such questions in a cohesive, compelling manner, social-ecological research can be bounded, structured, and distilled through innumerable organizing principles or theoretical frameworks. For this dissertation, I focused on the geographic region of Tierra del Fuego and sought to draw from the array of disciplines and methods that use sound as a lens for biological, ecological, and/or social inquiry. I also endeavored to consider various temporal, spatial, and organizational scales while investigating a selection of topics with a) specific importance in the social-ecological systems of Tierra del Fuego and b) general relevance to global social-ecological challenges. Chapter 1 provides an introduction to the dissertation, and Chapter 6 serves as a conclusion.</p><p><br></p><p> </p><p>The objective of Chapter 2, “Biogeographical and analytical implications of temporal variability in geographically diverse soundscapes”, was to provide some guidance to passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) practitioners on how to design appropriate temporal sampling schemes based on the temporal variability of the sounds one wishes to measure and the power and storage limitations of acoustic recorders. We first quantified the temporal variability of several soundscape measurements and compared that variability across sites and times of day. We also simulated a wide range of temporal sampling schemes in order to model their representativeness relative to continuous sampling.</p><p><br></p><p> </p><p>For Chapter 3, “Sentinels for sentinels: passive acoustic and camera trap monitoring of sensitive penguin populations”, we tested the utility of PAM to monitor behavior and abundance of Magellanic (<i>Spheniscus magellanicus</i>) and southern rockhopper penguins (<i>Eudyptes chrysocome</i>) at different spatial and temporal scales. We conducted <i>in situ</i> observations of the acoustic behavior of each species, and we compared acoustic metrics with penguin counts from narrowly focused camera traps and larger-extent observations of colony density. </p><p><br></p><p> </p><p>Chapter 4, “Acoustic monitoring shows invasive beavers (<i>Castor canadensis</i>) increase avian diversity in Tierra del Fuego”, is focused on impacts of the invasive North American beaver (<i>Castor canadensis</i>) on Fuegian bird communities. We sought to determine how bird communities might differ between intact riparian forests, beaver ponds, and beaver meadows created by pond drainage. We conducted PAM and classic avian point counts under each of these conditions across seasons to test for differences between impact conditions and to compare the two methodologies.</p><p><br></p><p> </p>For Chapter 5, “Human-nature connection and soundscape perception: insights from Tierra del Fuego, Argentina”, we evaluated the relationship between soundscape perception and nature relatedness by conducting surveys and soliciting responses to soundscape audio prompts. We also examined the potential for any demographic influences on nature relatedness or soundscape perception in the context of local social tensions.
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