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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.
1

Vybrané aspekty podzimního tahu ptáků a netopýrů přes horské sedlo / Selected aspects of autumn migration of birds and bats over a mountain pass

Koukolíková, Anna January 2017 (has links)
Mountain passes situated in mountains of east-western orientation serve as important bird and bat migration corridors. Due to the increased concentration of migranting individuals in both groups, mountain passes can be used to study various aspects of migratory ecology. Within the Czech Republic, the most important site of this type is Červenohorské sedlo in Jeseníky. In this thesis, selected aspects of autumn migration (composition of the migratory population, phenology, factors influencing its intensity) of birds and bats during the autumn season were compared. In addition, data usability was compared for a reliable determination of autumn phenology in selected model bird species based. The comparison was between standardized mist netting in the mountains and set of data obtained from faunistic observations throughout the Czech Republic. Data from mountain mist netting has proven to be a more reliable indicator of the timing of bird migration, mainly because most species fly directly and quickly over the mountains, while in low-level observations there is a risk of mixinglocal and migratory populations. Also the number of observed individuals in some cases reflects the interest in extreme late occurrences in many species, which are generally given more attention and are more frequently recorded...
2

Phenotypic correlates of spawning migration behaviour for roach (Rutilus rutilus) and ide (Leuciscus idus) in the stream Oknebäcken, Sweden.

Lindbladh, Emma, Eriksson, Johanna January 2020 (has links)
Migration occurs among many animal species for the purpose of, among other things, finding food or to reproduce. Spawning migration is a form of migration that occurs among many fish species where they move to another site for reproduction. The movement can be obstructed by migration barriers like road culverts. Barriers to migration pose one of the greatest threats to biodiversity and ecosystem functions in freshwater. They impair the connectivity of watercourses and may prevent fish from improving reproductive success or completing their life histories altogether. There are both benefits and costs with migration, benefits such as increased survival for the adults and offspring, and costs such as increased energy consumption and increased mortality. The costs are often dependent on the morphological traits of the individual, like body shape and size. In this study, the spawning migration of two species of fish of the family Cyprinidae, ide (Leuciscus idus) and roach (Rutilus rutilus) was investigated. Few studies have been made on ide or on roach compared to other cyprinids and salmonids. This study might therefore enhance the overall knowledge of these two species. The overall aims of this project are to study and compare phenotypic correlates of spawning migration behaviour of ide and roach. The field studies were performed in Oknebäcken, Mönsterås (SE632310-152985), Sweden in March and April 2020. To describe the watercourse and define the location and characteristics of different potential migration barriers, a simplified biotope mapping method was used. The fish were caught in a hoop net and then measured, weighted, sexed, and injected with passive integrated transponder using the bevel down method. In order to register in stream movement of fish, reading stations with antennas were placed, at two locations upstream from the marking station and one downstream at the estuary. The sex ratio differed from the expected 1:1 with a majority of females for both species. This might be a result of fluctuations in survival of spawn coupled with different age-at-maturity between sexes. We found that individuals that arrived early to the stream were larger for both study species, as other studies also reported. Also, male ide was both larger and arrived before female ide. There might be an energy cost associated with early arrival to the stream and therefore, larger individuals arrive first. For roach, there was no difference in arrival time between the sexes although female roach were larger. There was no difference in the time spent in the stream between the species. For ide, females stayed for a longer period of time in the stream than males. However, the opposite was true for roach. This may be because male roach might benefit from more fertilization events when staying longer. There might therefore be a trade-off between the energy cost in staying in the stream and the increased fitness advantage in fertilization events. We found no correlation between any of the morphological traits and migration distance. However, since very few individuals were registered at the upstream reading stations, there might be an effect of migration barriers on the spawning migration. The mortality after spawning was higher for roach than for ide. For ide, a larger proportion of females than males died. For roach, individuals that arrived early was classified as alive to a greater extent than those who arrived late. Both similarities and differences between the species were discovered in this study which concludes that even closely related species might differ substantially from each other.
3

Aspens (Aspius aspius) lekvandring och lekhabitat utnyttjande i Glumman.

Olsson, Peter January 2012 (has links)
Aspen är en karpartad fiskart och lite är känt om dess ekologi, på rödlistan har den klassen nära hotad (ArtDatabanken 2012). I värmländska Glumman, en ca två mil lång övergödd å belägen väster om Väse, vandrar aspen upp på våren för att leka vid Väse kyrka där den enda kända lekplatsen i ån finns. Tre vandringshinder finns i ån varav det nedersta är beläget ca 500 m från den kända lekplatsen. Syftet med studien var att undersöka om asp som lyftes över det nedersta vandringshindret sökte sig till lekplatser högre upp i systemet och om de där lekte. Totalt radiomärktes tre asphanar varav två lyftes över det nedersta vandringshindret. Ingen av dem vandrade vidare uppströms för att undersöka möjligheterna till lek. Den asp som släpptes ut nedströms vandringshindret visade inte några tendenser på att vilja passera den kända lekplatsen och fortsätta mot vandringshindret. Leken skedde på det första lekområdet som aspen kommer till i Glumman. När aspen lämnat Glumman uppehöll de sig i sjön Panken. Den första aspen lämnade Panken efter 22 dagar, den andra efter 23 dagar, båda vandrade nedströms mot Vänern. Den tredje aspen var kvar i Panken vid studiens slut. En fiskväg förbi det första vandringshindret i Glumman skulle troligen inte vara det bästa sättet att gynna aspen på för tillfället. / The asp is a threatened cyprinid fish, of which little is known about its ecology (ArtDatabanken 2012). In Glumman, a nearly twenty kilometer long eutrophicated river located west of Väse in Värmland, asp migrate upstream for spawning in the spring to the only known spawning ground, located at Väse church. There are three migration barriers in the river, of which the lowermost is located about 500 m from the spawning ground. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether asp that were lifted over the lowermost migration barrier found their way to spawning grounds higher up in the system and if they spawned there. In total, two of three radio-tagged male asps were lifted above the lowermost migration barrier. None of them migrated further upstream, where they could explore opportunities for spawning. The asp that was placed downstream of the migration barriers did not swim upstream past the known spawning ground and continue to the migration barrier. Spawning occurred at the first spawning ground that the asps reached in Glumman. When the asps left Glumman they went into Lake Panken. The first one left LakePanken after 22 days, the second after 23 days and both migrated downstream towards LakeVänern. The third was still in LakePanken at the end of the study. A fishway at the lowermost migration barrier in Glumman is not likely the best way to help asp at the moment.

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