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Ecological Situations (ecological + situation)
Selected AbstractsProperties of ecotones: Evidence from five ecotones objectively determined from a coastal vegetation gradientJOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, Issue 4 2003Susan Walker Connor & Edgar (1987) and references therein, and Stace (1997), except where indicated Abstract. Several properties have been suggested to be characteristic of ecotones, but their prevalence has rarely been tested. We sampled five ecotones to seek evidence on seven generalizations that are commonly made about ecotones: vegetational sharpness, physiognomic change, occurrence of a spatial community mosaic, many exotic species, ecotonal species, spatial mass effect, and species richness higher or lower than either side of the ecotone. The ecotones were in a sequence from scattered mangroves, through salt marsh, rush-marsh, scrub, woodland, to pasture. We developed a method to objectively define, by rapid vegetational change, the position and depth of an ecotone, identifying five ecotones. Their positions were consistent across three sampling schemes and two spatial grain sizes. One ecotone is a switch ecotone, produced by positive feedback between community and environment. Another is anthropogenic, due to clearing for agriculture. Two others are probably environmental in cause, and one may be largely a relict environmental ecotone. Sharp changes in species composition occurred. Three ecotones were associated with a change in plant physiognomy. In two, the ecotone was located just outside a woodland canopy, in the zone influenced by the canopy. Community mosaicity was evident at only one ecotone. There were few strictly ecotonal species; many species occurred more frequently within ecotones than in adjacent vegetation, but there were never significantly more ecotonal species than expected at random. There was little evidence for the spatial mass effect reducing ecotonal sharpness, or leading to higher species richness within ecotones. Species richness was higher than in the adjacent habitat in only one ecotone. It seems that supposedly characteristic ecotone features depend on the particular ecological situation, and the ecology of the species present, rather than being intrinsic properties of ecotones. [source] A ratio-dependent eco-epidemiological model of the Salton SeaMATHEMATICAL METHODS IN THE APPLIED SCIENCES, Issue 2 2006Kusumika Kundu Abstract Ratio-dependent models set up a challenging issue for their rich dynamics incomparison to prey-dependent models. Little attention has been paid so far to describe the importance of transmissible disease in ecological situation by considering ratio-dependent models. In this paper, by assuming the predator response function as ratio-dependent, we consider a model of a system of three non-linear differential equations describing the time evolution of susceptible and infected Tilapia fish population and their predator, the Pelican. Existence and stability analysis of different equilibria of the system lead to different realistic thresholds in terms of system parameters. The condition for extinction of the species is also worked out. Our analytical and numerical studies may be helpful to chalk out suitable control strategies for minimizing the extinction of the Pelicans. We also suggest that supply of alternative food source for predator population may be used as a possible solution to save the predator from their extinction. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Wood storage in a wide mountain river: case study of the Czarny Dunajec, Polish CarpathiansEARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 12 2005omiej Wy Abstract Storage of large woody debris in the wide, mountain, Czarny Dunajec River, southern Poland, was investigated following two floods of June and July 2001 with a seven-year frequency. Within a reach, to which wood was delivered only by bank erosion and transport from upstream, wood quantities were estimated for eighty-nine, 100 m long, channel segments grouped into nine sections of similar morphology. Results from regression analysis indicated the quantity of stored wood to be directly related to the length of eroded, wooded banks and river width, and inversely related to unit stream power at the flood peak. The largest quantities of wood (up to 33 t ha,1) were stored in wide, multi-thread river sections. Here, the relatively low transporting ability of the river facilitated deposition of transported wood while a considerable length of eroded channel and island banks resulted in a large number of trees delivered from the local riparian forest. In these sections, a few morphological and ecological situations led to the accumulation of especially large quantities of wood within a small river area. Very low amounts of wood were stored in narrow, single-thread sections of regulated or bedrock channel. High stream power facilitated transport of wood through these sections while the high strength of the banks and low channel sinuosity prevented bank retreat and delivery of trees to the channel. Considerable differences in the character of deposited wood existed between wide, multi-thread channel sections located at different distances below a narrow, 7 km long, channellized reach of the river. Wood deposited close to the downstream end of the channellized reach was highly disintegrated and structured into jams, whereas further downstream well preserved shrubs and trees prevailed. This apparently reflects differences in the distance of wood transport and shows that in a mountain river wider than the height of trees growing on its banks, wood can be transported long distances along relatively narrow, single-thread reaches but is preferentially deposited in wide, multi-thread reaches. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Data cloning: easy maximum likelihood estimation for complex ecological models using Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo methodsECOLOGY LETTERS, Issue 7 2007Subhash R. Lele Abstract We introduce a new statistical computing method, called data cloning, to calculate maximum likelihood estimates and their standard errors for complex ecological models. Although the method uses the Bayesian framework and exploits the computational simplicity of the Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) algorithms, it provides valid frequentist inferences such as the maximum likelihood estimates and their standard errors. The inferences are completely invariant to the choice of the prior distributions and therefore avoid the inherent subjectivity of the Bayesian approach. The data cloning method is easily implemented using standard MCMC software. Data cloning is particularly useful for analysing ecological situations in which hierarchical statistical models, such as state-space models and mixed effects models, are appropriate. We illustrate the method by fitting two nonlinear population dynamics models to data in the presence of process and observation noise. [source] Geranyl acetate esterase is commonly present but linalyl acetate esterase occurrence is highly limited in plantsFLAVOUR AND FRAGRANCE JOURNAL, Issue 3 2007Neelam S. Sangwan Abstract Esterases are a group of hydrolytic enzymes that split ester bonds by addition of water and are ubiquitously present in diverse biosystems. Although animal esterases are well studied and are catalytically and functionally classified into different groups, plant enzymes have been viewed rather generally and are casually recruited as biochemical markers in morphogenesis, genetic characterization of plants, etc., without functional emphasis. Some volatile oil plants constitutively synthesize their characteristic monoterpene esters, geranyl acetate and linalyl acetate being the most common among them in the acyclic monoterpene class, whereas other plants also synthesize some volatile hemi- to sesquiterpene esters but inductively under certain ecological situations, such as herbivory, wounding, etc. This study concerns screening relative distribution of geranyl acetate esterase and linalyl aceate esterase activities in selected medicinal and aromatic plants, and reveals that in plants geranyl acetate (a primary alcohol ester) esterase is commonly present, while linalyl acetate (a tertiary alcohol ester) esterase seems to be highly limited to those plants (e.g. Lippia alba, Mentha citrata) that biosynthesize the tertiary monoterpene alcohol linalool and its ester. Such contrasting distribution of the two discrete types of esterases has been discussed in light of scenario of their microbial counterparts and structure,function relationships established thereon. This study makes it obvious that the GGG(A)-X motif esterases (acting on tertiary alcohol esters) are rare entities in plants too, similar to microbes. Furthermore, their presence in some volatile oil plants renders such plants novel phytoresources of the GGGX/GGAX motif hydrolases. Detailed characterization of the motif-specific plant esterases would have an immense impact on understanding of their structure,function relationships in plants. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] |