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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.
581

Hummeln in der Agrarlandschaft / Ressourcennutzung, Koloniewachstum und Sammelzeiten / Bumblebees in agricultural landscapes / Resource utilisation, colony growth and duration of foraging trips

Westphal, Catrin 27 May 2004 (has links)
No description available.
582

Black Guillemots as indicators of change in the near-shore Arctic marine ecosystem

Harter, B. Britten 14 September 2007 (has links)
This study attempted to explain an apparent inverse relationship between pack ice proximity and breeding success of Black Guillemots (Cepphus grylle) on Cooper Island, a barrier island in the western Beaufort Sea near Barrow, AK. I elucidated the first linear relationship between energy density and body size for the elusive Arctic Cod (Boreogadus saida). I discovered and ground-truthed the existence of previously unknown guillemot foraging habitat on small 50 m2 ice floes distant from the pack ice. I developed new daily metrics for quantifying the provisioning to linear (8 d – 18 d) and Post-Linear (19 d – fledge) chicks. I found daily consensus between Linear and Post-Linear chicks about the level of provisioning at the colony. Finally, I explained those daily changes with significant correlations with wind speed and direction.
583

Black Guillemots as indicators of change in the near-shore Arctic marine ecosystem

Harter, B. Britten 14 September 2007 (has links)
This study attempted to explain an apparent inverse relationship between pack ice proximity and breeding success of Black Guillemots (Cepphus grylle) on Cooper Island, a barrier island in the western Beaufort Sea near Barrow, AK. I elucidated the first linear relationship between energy density and body size for the elusive Arctic Cod (Boreogadus saida). I discovered and ground-truthed the existence of previously unknown guillemot foraging habitat on small 50 m2 ice floes distant from the pack ice. I developed new daily metrics for quantifying the provisioning to linear (8 d – 18 d) and Post-Linear (19 d – fledge) chicks. I found daily consensus between Linear and Post-Linear chicks about the level of provisioning at the colony. Finally, I explained those daily changes with significant correlations with wind speed and direction.
584

Behavioural ecology of foraging and predator avoidance trade-offs in Lake Sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens)

2014 April 1900 (has links)
I investigated Lake Sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) foraging and anti-predator behaviour. My goals were to understand: (1) The role of environmental change on foraging and anti-predator behaviour trade-offs. (2) The relative cost/benefit trade-off between escape behaviour and cover-seeking behaviour. (3) How development of several independent morphological traits affects anti-predator behaviours. I used simulated river mesocosms to study Lake Sturgeon behavioural ecology under controlled conditions. I found: (1) Foraging intensity was significantly higher during the night than the day as well as in turbid environments versus clear environments, indicating that decreased turbidity alone, may in part drive anti-predator behaviour and constrain foraging activity. (2) In high-risk clear-water environments, Lake Sturgeon responded to danger by evoking an escape response and seeking cover in rocky microhabitats. However, in low-risk turbid environments, Lake Sturgeon responded to danger by seeking cover in rocky microhabitats, but not fleeing to a significant degree. Cover-seeking behaviour may therefore be a relatively low-cost/high-benefit anti-predator strategy. (3) Strong evidence for trait co-dependence between escape responses and body size, where larger fish were able to elicit stronger escape responses. I also found that cover-seeking behaviour exhibited a complex multi-tiered relationship, representing a mixture of trait compensation and trait co-specialization that is dependent on specific combinations of morphological traits. These findings are important because they help us understand: (1) The degree to which anti-predator behaviour can be influenced by changing environmental conditions. (2) The relative cost/benefit trade-off between two common anti-predator behaviours. (3) How behaviour and morphology interact in species with a complex anti-predator phenotype.
585

The foraging ecology of gray whales in Clayoquot Sound: interactions between predator and prey across a continuum of scales

Feyrer, Laura Joan 24 March 2010 (has links)
Understanding the ecology of an organism is fundamental for defining conservation and management priorities for wildlife and natural ecosystems. The most basic ecological framework identifies the key components of an organism's habitat, and the scale for measuring the quality of those features. How these core needs are expressed and vary in the surrounding ecosystem changes over time and space. In marine systems, the physical environment has few strict boundaries, and variations regularly occur on a scale from days to decades. The dynamic and patchy nature of marine habitat makes defining the ecological roles of an animal difficult, even where baseline data exists. In this study I analyze long term field records on the ecological interactions between foraging gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus), and their mysid prey (Family mysidae) in Clayoquot Sound, B.C. By looking at spatial and temporal shifts at both trophic levels, I measure foraging responses and requirements, and assess prey resource availability and resiliency in the marine environment at a series of scales. Appreciation for bottom-up and topdown trophic interactions provides the foundation for identifying natural variability in marine habitat, and a baseline for conservation measures that seek to use marine predators as a barometer of broader ecosystem health.
586

Aspects of the foraging ecology of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) in Frederick Sound and Stephens Passage, Southeast Alaska

Szabo, Andrew, 1974- 09 May 2011 (has links)
The North Pacific humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) population has been increasing at an average annual rate of ~6% since the early 1990s. In northern Southeast Alaska alone, there are now more whales than estimated for the entire North Pacific several decades ago. An understanding of how this growing population is repopulating traditional foraging grounds will benefit from detailed investigations of their prey preferences and trends in whale abundance and distribution relative to those prey. This dissertation examines these issues from late May until early September 2008 in Frederick Sound and Stephens Passage, a Southeast Alaskan feeding area historically used by humpback whales. The foundation for the study is an analysis of the life histories and abundance patterns of euphausiids, the principal prey of humpbacks in the area, during late spring and summer. Four species, Thysanoessa raschii, T. longipes, T. spinifera, and Euphausia pacifica, were identified in plankton net samples collected at random locations throughout the study site (n = 49) and in locations where a strong scattering layer was observed on a 120 kHz echosounder (n = 48). Both sample types varied in euphausiid species composition. Abundance patterns of immature euphausiids coupled with observations of females carrying spermatophores indicated differences between species in spawning schedules. Thysanoessa spp. began spawning in early April with the spring phytoplankton bloom and continued until late June, whereas E. pacifica began spawning in early June and continued until late August. This protracted recruitment of immature euphausiids was geographically widespread throughout the summer in contrast to adults, which, although present all summer, were found primarily in slope and shallow (< 100 m) areas. To determine if humpback whales preferred one euphausiid species or life-stage over another, net sample and hydroacoustic data collected in the vicinity of whales were compared to similar data collected in random locations throughout the study site. This revealed that whales targeted dense aggregations of adult euphausiids, but did not discriminate between the various species, which was surprising because of presumed differences in the energy density linked to their different spawning schedules. Additionally, whales did not spend time in areas with concentrations of immature euphausiids, which were likely not large enough during the study period to be suitable prey. With this preference for adult euphausiids, the abundance and distribution patterns of humpbacks were examined in relation to prey availability. Whale abundance was lowest at the beginning of the study in late May at ca. 68 whales and peaked in late July at ca. 228 animals – approximately 12% of the region’s estimated abundance for the study year. This study did not detect a concomitant increase in the availability of adult euphausiids, which is unsurprising since immature euphausiids would not recruit into the adult population until after the end of the study, and post-spawning mortality and predation pressure is presumably high during this time. Instead, whales clustered increasingly around comparatively fewer prey as the summer progressed. These observations, combined with a plateau in whale abundance after July, suggest that their abundance in the area was limited by euphausiid availability. Estimates of whales using the study site during the summer have remained similar over several decades despite a dramatic increase in humpback numbers in Southeast Alaska and elsewhere in the North Pacific. The results from this study suggest that, although the study site remains important seasonally to some whales, it is not a significant source of prey responsible for regional population growth in general. More likely, it is part of a network of feeding areas that has influenced the population trend. Further insight into these and the other issues raised in this dissertation could come from several additional analyses. An extended sampling season that captures the recruitment of immature euphausiids into the adult population would reveal whether a given year's prey cohort represents an important resource to whales in that same year, which has potential implications for interpreting mid-late season whale abundance patterns. As well, a photo-identification study would be useful in characterizing whale residency patterns and determining whether the abundance trends reflect a relatively small subset of the regional population using the area for most of the season or a continuous flow of a larger portion of the population. Finally, similar analyses as those outlined here but conducted in other areas within the region would provide additional insight into the network’s capacity to support the recovering whale population. / Graduation date: 2012
587

Morcegos frugívoros no uso do hábitat fragmentado e seu potencial para recuperação de áreas degradadas: subsídios para uma nova ferramenta voltada à conservação

Bianconi, Gledson Vigiano [UNESP] 26 May 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-11T19:35:43Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2009-05-26Bitstream added on 2014-06-13T19:25:11Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 bianconi_gv_dr_rcla.pdf: 2615245 bytes, checksum: e626d43cffce5b3b04c96086c87decdf (MD5) / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) / Filostomídeos frugívoros são considerados elementos-chave na conservação e restauração florestal dado à sua representatividade numérica (espécies e indivíduos), alto potencial de deslocamento e eficiência na dispersão de sementes. Técnicas que potencializem esse papel ecológico podem ter grande aplicação na recuperação de hábitats degradados, comuns à Mata Atlântica brasileira. Estudos com óleos essenciais isolados de frutos quiropterocóricos maduros sugeriram que eles podem ser utilizados para atrair e capturar morcegos frugívoros no interior de áreas florestais. Assim, a presente tese foi desenvolvida para fundamentar o caráter prático-funcional desta nova ferramenta, na medida em que se propôs a investigar os movimentos e o uso do hábitat fragmentado por espécies frugívoras, bem como as suas respostas a atrativos odoríferos instalados na matriz agropecuária de uma paisagem intensamente fragmentada no sul do Brasil (municípios de Fênix e São Pedro do Ivaí, estado do Paraná). Seus resultados indicaram uma atração altamente significativa dos morcegos aos óleos, um elevado potencial de dispersão de um grande número e diversidade de propágulos, e a possibilidade de manter os indivíduos por algum tempo sobrevoando pontos específicos da matriz, o que incrementaria, sobremaneira, a chuva-de-sementes no local. Os métodos de marcação/recaptura e radiotelemetria demonstraram existir uma alta mobilidade de Artibeus lituratus (Olfers, 1818) e Carollia perspicillata (Linnaeus, 1758), morcegos frugívoros mais comuns na região, dentro e entre os remanescentes florestais, com a utilização conjunta de diferentes elementos da paisagem (fragmentos, matriz agropecuária, pomares, rios, etc.). A matriz agropecuária da região parece não inibir os deslocamentos das espécies, padrão este relevante para o processo de dispersão de sementes e para a eficácia... / Frugivorous phyllostomids are considered key elements to forest conservation and restoration due to their representative number (species and individuals), high mobility, and efficiency as seed dispersers. Techniques to improve this ecological role can find great application in the recovery of degraded habitats, usually found in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. Previous tests with essential oils from ripe chiropterochoric fruits suggested they can be used to attract and capture fruit-eating bats inside forest remnants. The present thesis was conducted to provide the basis to functional and practical characteristics of this new tool. Thus, we investigated the movements and use of a fragmented habitat by frugivorous species, as well as bats’ response to odor attractives installed in the agropecuary matrix of an extremely fragmented field at South Brazil (city of Fênix and São Pedro do Ivaí, State of Paraná). The results indicate a significant bat attraction to the essential oils, a great potential for dispersion of a large number and diversified seeds, the possibility of keeping bats flying for some time over specific locations of the matrix, which can increase significantly seeds dispersion in specific spots. By using mark/recapture and radiotelemetry techniques we observed high mobility of Artibeus lituratus (Olfers, 1818) and Carollia perspicillata (Linnaeus, 1758), the most common frugivorous bats in the study region , inside and between forests remnants with the combined use of different habitat attributes (fragments, agropecuary matrix, orchards, rivers, etc.). So, the regional agropecuary matrix does not seem to inhibit the movement of the species, which is an important behavior for seed dispersal and for the efficacy of the tool used for restoration of degraded areas.
588

Comportamento de forrageamento de Xiphorhynchus fuscus (Aves: Dendrocolaptidae): uma comparação entre áreas de Mata Atlântica de ilha e continente / Foraging behavior of Xiphorhynchus fuscus (Aves: Dendrocolaptidae): a comparison between Atlantic rainforest areas of island and mainland

Liliane de Souza Seixas 28 February 2013 (has links)
Mudanças de nicho entre ilhas e continente, ou entre diferentes ilhas, incluem expansões de habitat e faixas mais amplas de estratos verticais de forrageamento. Organismos estão geralmente aptos a explorar apenas uma porção dos recursos que se encontra disponível no ambiente. A maneira como partilham esses recursos, além de definir seu nicho ecológico, pode indicar como as interações entre as espécies influenciam na estrutura da comunidade. Estas espécies, por sua vez, encontram-se associadas por suas relações de alimentação. Entre aves, diferentes espécies se associam para explorar recursos alimentares em agregações como a de espécies que seguem correição de formigas ou em bandos mistos. A associação de aves a bandos mistos tem sido relacionada à diminuição da predação e aumento da eficiência do forrageamento. Nesse tipo de associação, as espécies são categorizadas de acordo com a sua frequência e importância, e podem contribuir com a formação, coesão e manutenção do bando. O presente estudo teve como objetivo comparar o comportamento de forrageamento de Xiphorhynchus fuscus entre áreas de Mata Atlântica de ilha e continente a fim de investigar se existem diferenças em decorrência do isolamento. Foram realizadas transecções e observado o comportamento de forrageamento da espécie entre áreas de ilha e continente adjacente. Os resultados mostram uma diferença nos uso dos estratos verticais entre ilha e continente e entre indivíduos forrageando solitários e em bandos mistos de aves. A maior amplitude dos estratos verticais na ilha e a restrição deles no continente pela espécie, ao forragear solitariamente, indicam um provável efeito relacionado à competição. As diferenças entre o uso dos estratos verticais entre ilha e continente indicam a influência da composição das espécies em bandos mistos no estrato vertical utilizado por X. fuscus quando associado a estes. A menor adesão de X. fuscus a bandos mistos em ilha indica que a ausência de espécies de aves consideradas responsáveis pela associação das espécies e sua manutenção em bandos mistos seja responsável pela diferença encontrada em relação ao continente. Portanto, a diferença entre o número de espécies entre ilha e continente (com menor número na ilha) parece ser preponderante na utilização dos estratos verticais de forrageamento por X. fuscus estando ele associado a bandos mistos ou não / Niche shifts between island and mainland, or between different islands, include habitat expansions and wider range of foraging vertical strata. In general, organisms are able to explore just few portions of available resources, and the way they share them can define their ecological niche and indicate how species interactions can influence the community structure. Those species are connected by their feeding relations. Among birds, several species become associated to each other to explore food resources in groups such as some army ants followers and mixed-species flocks. Mixed-species flocks are related to lower predation and foraging maximization. In this association, species are categorized by their frequency and matter, and can contribute to formation, cohesion and maintenance of the entire flock. The present study aimed to compare foraging behavior of Xiphorhynchus fuscus among island and mainland Atlantic Forest areas to investigate potential differences due to isolation. We conducted linear transects and observed its foraging behavior in the study areas. Our results indicate that there is a difference in the use of vertical strata between island and mainland, and also between solitary individuals and those associated with mixed-species flock. The wider range of vertical strata in islands and their absence in mainland can be related to competition. The difference in the proportion used of the vertical strata between island and mainland indicates an influence of the species composition in mixed-species flocks. The lower adhesion of X. fuscus to enjoy mixed-species flocks can be influenced by the absence of nuclear species in islands. For that reason, the difference in the number of species present between islands and mainland can be the main factor for foraging vertical strata used by X. fuscus, associated or not to mixed-species flocks
589

Spatial and temporal patterns in resource dispersion and the structure of range use and co-existence in a social omnivore Chlorocebus Aethiops

Barrett, Alan Sean 11 1900 (has links)
The movements of two vervet monkey troops were studied to determine whether they optimize their rate of food intake in relation to seasonal energy availability. The effect of variation in habitat structure on the troops’ foraging strategies while utilizing temporally and spatially distributed resources was determined. Troop home range boundaries were delineated, the various plant communities and species utilised by the troops identified and classified, and variations in home range and vegetation structure were reported. The diets of the troops were determined and compared. Effects of coexistence on competition were assessed. Vervet food trees were randomly selected, marked and seasonal phenological data collected. Samples of food items constituting the two troops diets were collected for energy analysis. Using geostatistical interpolation techniques, monthly energy values were extrapolated onto home range grids for the two vervet monkey troops. Grids were stored as database files that were interrogated through GIS simulation models. Using the stochastic processes inherent in Markov chain theory, a series of non-returning random walks were simulated for comparison to original routes taken by the two troops. Results from comparisons of home range energy, day range lengths and areas, shortest route energy to actual route energy, time spent in high energy areas, and energy utilisation from actual and randomly generated routes indicated that the two troops optimize resource energy available to them by adopting flexible foraging strategies. In environments where temporal and spatial variations in habitat structure affect the distribution of resources, it is essential that animals develop optimal foraging strategies to survive. For the two troops investigated, foraging strategies fluctuate between being time minimizers in more heterogeneous environments where resources are abundant, and energy maximisers in homogeneous environments where resources are constrained by low diversity and seasonality. / Environmental Sciences (Department) / D.Litt et Phil (Environmental Management)
590

Comportamento de forrageamento de Xiphorhynchus fuscus (Aves: Dendrocolaptidae): uma comparação entre áreas de Mata Atlântica de ilha e continente / Foraging behavior of Xiphorhynchus fuscus (Aves: Dendrocolaptidae): a comparison between Atlantic rainforest areas of island and mainland

Liliane de Souza Seixas 28 February 2013 (has links)
Mudanças de nicho entre ilhas e continente, ou entre diferentes ilhas, incluem expansões de habitat e faixas mais amplas de estratos verticais de forrageamento. Organismos estão geralmente aptos a explorar apenas uma porção dos recursos que se encontra disponível no ambiente. A maneira como partilham esses recursos, além de definir seu nicho ecológico, pode indicar como as interações entre as espécies influenciam na estrutura da comunidade. Estas espécies, por sua vez, encontram-se associadas por suas relações de alimentação. Entre aves, diferentes espécies se associam para explorar recursos alimentares em agregações como a de espécies que seguem correição de formigas ou em bandos mistos. A associação de aves a bandos mistos tem sido relacionada à diminuição da predação e aumento da eficiência do forrageamento. Nesse tipo de associação, as espécies são categorizadas de acordo com a sua frequência e importância, e podem contribuir com a formação, coesão e manutenção do bando. O presente estudo teve como objetivo comparar o comportamento de forrageamento de Xiphorhynchus fuscus entre áreas de Mata Atlântica de ilha e continente a fim de investigar se existem diferenças em decorrência do isolamento. Foram realizadas transecções e observado o comportamento de forrageamento da espécie entre áreas de ilha e continente adjacente. Os resultados mostram uma diferença nos uso dos estratos verticais entre ilha e continente e entre indivíduos forrageando solitários e em bandos mistos de aves. A maior amplitude dos estratos verticais na ilha e a restrição deles no continente pela espécie, ao forragear solitariamente, indicam um provável efeito relacionado à competição. As diferenças entre o uso dos estratos verticais entre ilha e continente indicam a influência da composição das espécies em bandos mistos no estrato vertical utilizado por X. fuscus quando associado a estes. A menor adesão de X. fuscus a bandos mistos em ilha indica que a ausência de espécies de aves consideradas responsáveis pela associação das espécies e sua manutenção em bandos mistos seja responsável pela diferença encontrada em relação ao continente. Portanto, a diferença entre o número de espécies entre ilha e continente (com menor número na ilha) parece ser preponderante na utilização dos estratos verticais de forrageamento por X. fuscus estando ele associado a bandos mistos ou não / Niche shifts between island and mainland, or between different islands, include habitat expansions and wider range of foraging vertical strata. In general, organisms are able to explore just few portions of available resources, and the way they share them can define their ecological niche and indicate how species interactions can influence the community structure. Those species are connected by their feeding relations. Among birds, several species become associated to each other to explore food resources in groups such as some army ants followers and mixed-species flocks. Mixed-species flocks are related to lower predation and foraging maximization. In this association, species are categorized by their frequency and matter, and can contribute to formation, cohesion and maintenance of the entire flock. The present study aimed to compare foraging behavior of Xiphorhynchus fuscus among island and mainland Atlantic Forest areas to investigate potential differences due to isolation. We conducted linear transects and observed its foraging behavior in the study areas. Our results indicate that there is a difference in the use of vertical strata between island and mainland, and also between solitary individuals and those associated with mixed-species flock. The wider range of vertical strata in islands and their absence in mainland can be related to competition. The difference in the proportion used of the vertical strata between island and mainland indicates an influence of the species composition in mixed-species flocks. The lower adhesion of X. fuscus to enjoy mixed-species flocks can be influenced by the absence of nuclear species in islands. For that reason, the difference in the number of species present between islands and mainland can be the main factor for foraging vertical strata used by X. fuscus, associated or not to mixed-species flocks

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