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Native Forests (native + forest)
Selected AbstractsEffects of Fragmentation of Araucarian Vine Forest on Small Mammal CommunitiesCONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 4 2000Jocelyn M. Bentley We examined the abundance of small mammal species in forests, corridors, remnants of araucarian vine forest, and Araucaria cunninghamii plantations and pastures. None of the forest mammal species persisted following conversion of forest to pasture. Plantations supported lowered abundances of a subset of forest species that were mainly habitat generalists with respect to their occurrence in different floristic types of undisturbed native forest. Within plantations, an increased subcanopy cover was associated with a more forest-like small mammal assemblage. Species' responses to habitat fragmentation varied. The floristic habitat generalists were largely tolerant of habitat fragmentation, their abundance being similar in forests, corridors, and remnants, and were capable of persisting in remnants a few hectares in area. Floristic habitat specialists were vulnerable to habitat fragmentation and thus were abundant in continuous forest, were less abundant in corridors, and were generally absent from remnants. Species that avoid the corridor matrix and are therefore constrained to the corridor may be disadvantaged by the linearity of the habitat, consistent with the predictions of central-place foraging theory. Although small remnants and corridors provide habitat for some species, those that are more specialized in their use of undisturbed habitat types require the retention or reestablishment of large intact areas. Resumen: La pérdida de hábitat y la fragmentación son amenazas importantes para la sobrevivencia de la fauna que depende del bosque. Examinamos la abundancia de especies de mamíferos pequeños en bosques, corredores, y en remanentes de bosques de vid araucarios y en plantaciones de Araucaria cunninghamii y pastizales. Ninguna de las especies de mamíferos del bosque persistió después de la conversión del bosque a pastizal. Las plantaciones favorecieron abundancias menores de un conjunto de especies del bosque integrado principalmente por generalistas de hábitat con respecto a su presencia en diferentes tipos florísticos de bosque nativo sin perturbar. Dentro de las plantaciones, cuanto mayor era la cobertura por debajo del dosel más se parecía el ensamblaje de mamíferos pequeños al del bosque. Las respuestas de las especies a la fragmentación del hábitat fueron variadas. Los generalistas del hábitat florístico por lo general toleraban la fragmentación del hábitat ( la abundancia en bosques, corredores y remanentes era similar) y fueron capaces de persistir en remanentes de unas pocas hectáreas de extensión. Los especialistas de hábitat florístico fueron vulnerables a la fragmentación del hábitat y por ello fueron más abundantes en bosques continuos, menos abundantes en corredores y generalmente ausentes en los remanentes. Las especies que evitaron la matriz de corredores y por lo tanto se encuentran limitadas al corredor pueden estar en desventaja por la linearidad del hábitat, consistente con las predicciones de la teoría del forrajeo de sitio central. A pesar de que los remanentes pequeños y los corredores proveen hábitat para algunas especies, aquéllas que son más especializadas en el uso de tipos de hábitat sin perturbar requieren de la retención o del restablecimiento de áreas intactas grandes. [source] Extinction debt on oceanic islandsECOGRAPHY, Issue 2 2010Kostas A. Triantis Habitat destruction is the leading cause of species extinctions. However, there is typically a time-lag between the reduction in habitat area and the eventual disappearance of the remnant populations. These "surviving but ultimately doomed" species represent an extinction debt. Calculating the magnitude of such future extinction events has been hampered by potentially inaccurate assumptions about the slope of species,area relationships, which are habitat- and taxon-specific. We overcome this challenge by applying a method that uses the historical sequence of deforestation in the Azorean Islands, to calculate realistic and ecologically-adjusted species,area relationships. The results reveal dramatic and hitherto unrecognized levels of extinction debt, as a result of the extensive destruction of the native forest:>95%, in<600,yr. Our estimations suggest that more than half of the extant forest arthropod species, which have evolved in and are dependent on the native forest, might eventually be driven to extinction. Data on species abundances from Graciosa Island, where only a very small patch of secondary native vegetation still exists, as well as the number of species that have not been found in the last 45,yr, despite the extensive sampling effort, offer support to the predictions made. We argue that immediate action to restore and expand native forest habitat is required to avert the loss of numerous endemic species in the near future. [source] Land-use influences macroinvertebrate community response following a pulse disturbanceFRESHWATER BIOLOGY, Issue 8 2003Kevin J. Collier Summary 1.,We tested the hypothesis that interactions between disturbance types can influence invertebrate community response and recovery in two streams draining pasture (press-pulse disturbance) and native forest (pulse disturbance) catchments before and after a one-in-28-year flood. We also sampled drift and adult insects to gain insights into the relative importance of these two postdisturbance recolonisation pathways. 2.,Taxa numbers and total density declined markedly at the forested site after the flood, but there was a delayed response at the pasture site, reflecting greater initial resistance to this pulse disturbance among taxa adapted to the underlying press disturbance. 3.,Community composition was less stable at the pasture site where per cent abundance of taxa was highly variable prior to the flood and over the 2-year postflood sampling period. After the flood, the pasture stream fauna was more heavily dominated by vagile taxa, including several chironomid species and hydroptilid caddisflies. 4.,Taxa numbers and densities recovered to preflood levels within 5,7 months at both sites, but a range of taxa-specific responses was observed that took up to 18 months to recover to preflood densities. Community stability at the pasture site had not returned to preflood composition by 2 years postflood. 5.,Changes in drift densities of several common stream invertebrates at the pasture site reflected postflood changes in benthic densities and seasonally low drift in winter. Terrestrial invertebrates dominated drift at the pasture site for 3 months postflood whereas Ephemeroptera were most common at the native forest site. 6.,Flight patterns of selected adult aquatic insects showed a strongly seasonal pattern. Abundance of adults at the pasture site in the second year following the flood increased in line with the recovery of the non-Dipteran benthic fauna. Significant upstream flight occurred for several caddisfly species at the native forest site, and weakly directional or downstream flight was evident for most common Plecoptera and Ephemeroptera. 7.,This study indicates that the magnitude and duration of responses to major pulse disturbances can depend on the presence or absence of an underlying press disturbance. This finding has implications for monitoring, and suggests that a knowledge of disturbance history beyond 2 years may be required to interpret mechanisms contributing to observed land-use impacts. [source] Soil organic carbon storage in grazing pasture converted from forest on Andosol soilGRASSLAND SCIENCE, Issue 4 2007Shigeo Takahashi Abstract In order to clarify the effect of land-use change from forest to grazing pasture on the organic carbon storage in Andosol soil, the Rothamsted carbon turnover model for volcanic soil was applied to a pasture situated at the National Livestock Breeding Center (37°09,N, 140°03,E). The top 25-cm soil layer was considered to be an active soil carbon pool. The carbon storage in the soils of native forest surrounding the pastures ranged 111,163 t C ha,1 with an average of 133 t C ha,1, which was adjusted according to an equivalent soil weight of pasture. The pasture soil carbon stocks ranged 88,135 t C ha,1, with variations according to site and/or pasture age. The carbon inputs to the soil through the above- and below-ground dead material from pasture plants and cattle feces were estimated to be 1.1, 1.8 and 0.9 t C ha,1 year,1, respectively. As the model outputs of 14C content of the soil, which is an index of carbon dating corresponding to nuclear weapons testing, showed a relatively close agreement with the observations, the modeling was acceptable for the purpose of predicting the turnover of organic carbon in Andosol soil. The model simulation demonstrated that, in order to maintain the average forest carbon level, 3,4 t ha,1 year,1 of the organic carbon input would be needed. These inputs would be provided in a grazing pasture producing 8,9 t ha,1 year,1 of above-ground dry matter. [source] Impact of cocoa farming on vegetation in an agricultural landscape in GhanaAFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 2 2010Alex Asase Abstract Cocoa production occurs almost wholly within areas identified as biodiversity hotspots in West Africa and it has been noted as a major contributor to deforestation at the forest-agriculture interface. This study investigated the impact of cocoa farming on vegetation in relation to three land-use types of increasing cocoa production intensity from remnant native forest through shaded to unshaded cocoa farmlands in Ghana. The study used transects and forty-two 25 m × 25 m vegetation plots. The overall noncocoa plant species richness decreased significantly (95% CI) from the remnant native forest through shaded to the unshaded cocoa farmlands. Significant differences (P , 0.05) were also found in the mean density and basal area of noncocoa plants per hectare with the remnant native forest recording the highest values and the unshaded cocoa farmlands the lowest. The relative density of about 44.7% out of the 41 most abundant plant species declined in cocoa farmlands. The results of this study showed that cocoa farming could result in a drastic forest plant species loss with subsequent recruitment of nonforest species, forest plant species population decline as well as changes in the structural characteristics of the vegetation. This impact increases with increasing cocoa production intensity. Résumé En Afrique de l'Ouest, le cacao est produit presque entièrement dans des zones identifiées comme des hauts-lieux de la biodiversité et l'on a noté qu'il contribue toujours de façon importante à la déforestation à l'interface entre forêts et terres agricoles. Cette étude a analysé l'impact de la culture de cacao sur la végétation pour une utilisation des terres de trois types caractérisés par des intensités de production de cacao croissantes, allant des restes de forêt native à des exploitations ombragées et non ombragées de cacao, au Ghana. Cette étude a utilisé des transects et 42 parcelles de végétation de 25 m × 25 m. La richesse globale en espèces végétales - hors cacao - diminuait significativement (IC 95%) en passant des restes de forêt native aux exploitations de cacao ombragées et ensuite à celles qui sont exposées au soleil. On a aussi trouvé des différences significatives (P , 0,05) de la densité moyenne et de la surface basale par hectare des plants hors cacao, la forêt native restante donnant les valeurs les plus hautes et les exploitations exposées de cacao, les plus basses. La densité relative de près de 44,7% des 41 espèces végétales les plus abondantes diminuait dans les exploitations de cacao. Les résultats de cette étude ont montré que la production de cacao pouvait entraîner une perte drastique des espèces végétales forestières suivie d'un recrutement d'espèces non forestières, un déclin des populations d'espèces végétales forestières et des changements des caractéristiques structurelles de la végétation. Cette impacts augmentaient avec l'intensification de la production de cacao. [source] Notes on the distribution and abundance of the caecilian Boulengerula uluguruensis (Amphibia: Gymnophiona: Caeciliidae) in the Uluguru Mountains, TanzaniaAFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2006G. John Measey Abstract Boulengerula uluguruensis is a terrestrial caeciliid caecilian described from the Uluguru Mountains of Tanzania. We investigated the relative abundance of B. uluguruensis in agricultural and forested habitats at the beginning of the rainy season. This caecilian was found over a wide altitudinal range (450,1175 m a.s.l.), and in many land cover types (including natural forest, plantation forest and small scale agriculture), and different soil textures (including very compact soil). Based on quantitative and semi-quantitative surveys, B. uluguruensis is more abundant than any other subterranean lower vertebrate in this area, with densities up to 0.4 individuals m,2 in some agricultural plots. The hypothesis proposed, that B. uluguruensis is more abundant in agriculture than their native forest, could not be conclusively tested during this brief visit, although the data that were collected do not indicate to the contrary. Likewise, the size of animals from forest and agricultural populations could not be objectively compared. Résumé Boulengerulauluguruensis est un caecilian caeciliid terrestre décrit des montagnes d'Ulguru en Tanzanie. Nous avons relevé l'abondance relative du B. uluguruensis dans des habitats agricoles et boisés au début de la saison des pluies. Ce caecilian fut trouvé dans une grande envergure d'altitude (450 to 1175 m asl), et dans plusieurs genres de couverture des terres (y compris forêt naturelle, plantation, et agriculture à petite échelle), et differenté textures du sol (y compris sol de forte densité). Basé sur des enquêtes quantitatives et semi- quantitatives, le B. uluguruensis fut plus abondant que toute autre vertébré souterrain dans cette région, avec une densité jusqu'à 0,4 individus par m2 dans quelques terrains agricoles. Notre visite fut trop brève pour que nous puissions vérifier l'hypothèse avancée que B.uluguruensis est plus abondant dans l'agriculture que dans la forêt native dont ils sont indigènes, bien que les données accumulées ne montrent pas le contraire. De la même manière, la taille des animaux provenant des populations forestières et agricoles n'a pas pu être comparé objectivement. [source] Remnants of the Waikato: Native forest survival in a production landscapeNEW ZEALAND GEOGRAPHER, Issue 1 2005Mairi Jay Abstract:, This paper addresses the issue of conservation of native biodiversity on privately owned farmland in New Zealand. Based on surveys of Waikato dairy farmers as exemplars of intensive agricultural practice, it examines factors that influence the survival of native forest on land with potential for commercial production. Results suggest that a significant proportion of Waikato dairy farmers regard native forest favourably, although the proportion of farmers who actively conserve their forest is small. Factors that assist the persistence of native forest on dairy farms include personal characteristics of the farmer, past accidents of history which have left forest remnants in place, and physical characteristics of the farm such as topography. While the conservation of native biodiversity within this intensively farmed landscape is strongly influenced by political economy pressures that encourage production, non-utilitarian motives such as aesthetic enjoyment and family heritage can serve to counter the production ethic. [source] Using Dominance-Diversity Curves to Assess Completion Criteria After Bauxite Mining Rehabilitation in Western AustraliaRESTORATION ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2003C. D. Grant Abstract Dominance-diversity curves have been previously constructed for a range of ecosystems around the world to illustrate the dominance of particular species and show how their relative abundances compare between communities separated in time or space. We investigate the usefulness of dominance-diversity curves in rehabilitated areas to compare the floristic composition and abundance of "undisturbed" areas with disturbed areas, using bauxite mining rehabilitation in Western Australia as an example. Rehabilitated pits (11,13 years old) subjected to prescribed fire in autumn and spring were compared with unburned rehabilitated areas and the native jarrah (Eucalyptus marginata) forest. Dominance diversity curves were constructed by ranking the log of the species density values from highest to lowest. Species were categorized according to a variety of functional responses: life form (trees, shrubs, subshrubs, and annuals), fire response syndrome (seeder or resprouter), nitrogen fixing capability, and origin (native or adventive). Exponential functions showed extremely good fits for all sites (r2 = 0.939,0.995). Dominance diversity graphs showed that after burning of rehabilitated areas, sites exhibited a more similar dominance-diversity curve than before burning. This was emphasized in a classification (UPGMA) of the regression equations from the dominance-diversity curves that showed that sites burned in spring were more similar to the native forest than sites burned in autumn. There was no significant segregation of the nitrogen-fixing and species origin categories, although the life form and fire response groupings showed significant segregation along the dominance-diversity curve. Resprouters tended to be over-represented in the lower quartiles and under-represented in the upper quartiles of post-burn sites. It is suggested that using dominance-diversity curves in the monitoring of rehabilitated areas may be a useful approach because it provides an easily interpretable visual representation of both species richness and abundance relationships and may be further utilized to emphasize categories of plants that are over- or under-represented in rehabilitated areas. This will assist in the post-rehabilitation management of these sites. [source] Leaf litter breakdown in Patagonian streams: native versus exotic trees and the effect of invertebrate sizeAQUATIC CONSERVATION: MARINE AND FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS, Issue 2 2002R. J. Albariño Abstract 1.Nothofagus native forest in the Southern Andes is being progressively substituted by forestation with rapid growth of the exotic trees, mainly species of Pinaceae. The effect on stream processing dynamics is explored through in situ experiments. 2.The effects of leaf litter quality and macroinvertebrate size on in situ litter breakdown were analysed. Experiments were run in litter bags which allowed access of macroinvertebrate fauna in streams running through a dense forest of the deciduous Nothofagus pumilio. 3.In Experiment 1, the decay rates of N. pumilio leaves and Pinus ponderosa needles were measured during an autumn-winter period. N. pumilio decayed twice as fast as P. ponderosa (P<0.01). Shredders fed only on N. pumilio leaves. The total abundance of macroinvertebrates colonizing both treatments was similar; however, the biomass was higher in the N. pumilio treatment. Large shredders were only found colonizing N. pumilio leaves. Since no decay due to shredders was observed in P. ponderosa, the presence of macroinvertebrates in these litter bags was related to refuge and feeding on FPOM-biofilm resources. 4.In Experiment 2, N. pumilio leaf litter was exposed in order to allow (open bags) or restrict (closed bags) access of invertebrates. The invertebrate assemblage in open bags showed the similar pattern observed for N. pumilio in the first experiment. Gathering-collectors were generally smaller and dominant in number while shredder biomass was higher in open bags as a result of high individual biomass. N. pumilio decayed faster when the whole size spectrum of macroinvertebrates colonized the bags (P<0.01). However, feeding signs of small shredders were observed in closed bags, therefore their role on leaf litter breakdown in Andean streams should not be neglected. 5.The combined results of both experiments lead to the conclusion that the whole litter processing mechanism would be affected as a consequence of the substitution of native forest by exotic pine forestation. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Wildlife habitat strips and native forest ground-active beetle assemblages in plantation nodes in northeast TasmaniaAUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 4 2005Simon Grove Abstract, In Tasmania, plantation establishment is often concentrated in ,nodes', a practice that can result in a high degree of fragmentation of remaining native forest in these areas. In this study we examined the sensitivity of ground-active beetles to the effects of conversion of native forest to plantation in which remaining native forest is largely confined to narrow wildlife habitat strips. At five damp sclerophyll forest sites in northeast Tasmania, pitfall sampling was carried out along the middle axis of a wildlife habitat strip, in the young plantation surrounding the strip, and at three distances in from the edge of nearby continuous native forest. The study documented a rich fauna, particularly for carabids. Species composition varied among sites, emphasising the need for adequate regional reservation of native forest at appropriate spatial scales. While plots in plantations and strips supported similar numbers of species as continuous native forest, they usually differed in assemblage composition. In general, assemblages in strips appeared to be intermediate in composition between those of continuous native forest and plantations. Significant differences corresponding to a progressive change in assemblage composition with distance into continuous native forest from its edge were detected for one, possibly two, sites. Plots in strips were generally more similar in assemblage composition to those near the edge of continuous native forest than to those towards its interior. Within the study area, strips may promote the survival of species that otherwise associate with the edges of continuous native forest, but they may provide less effective habitat for species that associate with native forest interiors. However, they still harbour many native forest species which are rare or absent in plantations. Although only based on a short-term sampling program, the study implies that future strips in Tasmanian damp sclerophyll forest could better benefit some forest interior species if prescriptions were to specify wider strips. However, a clearer conservation outcome might be to ensure the continuance of a sufficiently comprehensive, adequate and representative network of native forest formal reserves (in addition to wildlife habitat strips) containing damp sclerophyll forest. These should be large enough to cater for forest interior species, and dispersed at a spatial scale appropriate to the rate of species turnover found among ground-active beetle assemblages in these forests. [source] One Hundred Fifty Years of Change in Forest Bird Breeding Habitat: Estimates of Species DistributionsCONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2005LISA A. SCHULTE aptitud del hábitat; ecología aviar; ecología de paisaje; planificación de conservación Abstract:,Evaluating bird population trends requires baseline data. In North America the earliest population data available are those from the late 1960s. Forest conditions in the northern Great Lake states (U.S.A.), however, have undergone succession since the region was originally cut over around the turn of the twentieth century, and it is expected that bird populations have undergone concomitant change. We propose pre-Euro-American settlement as an alternative baseline for assessing changes in bird populations. We evaluated the amount, quality, and distribution of breeding bird habitat during the mid-1800s and early 1990s for three forest birds: the Pine Warbler (Dendroica pinus), Blackburnian Warbler (D. fusca), and Black-throated Green Warbler (D. virens). We constructed models of bird and habitat relationships based on literature review and regional data sets of bird abundance and applied these models to widely available vegetation data. Original public-land survey records represented historical habitat conditions, and a combination of forest inventory and national land-cover data represented current conditions. We assessed model robustness by comparing current habitat distribution to actual breeding bird locations from the Wisconsin Breeding Bird Atlas. The model showed little change in the overall amount of Pine Warbler habitat, whereas both the Blackburnian Warber and the Black-throated Green Warbler have experienced substantial habitat losses. For the species we examined, habitat quality has degraded since presettlement and the spatial distribution of habitat shifted among ecoregions, with range expansion accompanying forest incursion into previously open habitats or the replacement of native forests with pine plantations. Sources of habitat loss and degradation include loss of conifers and loss of large trees. Using widely available data sources in a habitat suitability model framework, our method provides a long-term analysis of change in bird habitat and a presettlement baseline for assessing current conservation priority. Resumen:,La evaluación de tendencias de las poblaciones de aves requiere de datos de referencia. En Norte América, los primeros datos disponibles de poblaciones son del final de la década de 1960. Sin embargo, las condiciones de los bosques en los estados de los Grandes Lagos (E.U.A.) han experimentado sucesión desde que la región fue talada en los inicios del siglo veinte, y se espera que las poblaciones de aves hayan experimentado cambios concomitantes. Proponemos que se considere al período previo a la colonización euro americana como referencia alternativa para evaluar los cambios en las poblaciones de aves. Evaluamos la cantidad, calidad y distribución del hábitat para reproducción de tres especies de aves de bosque (Dendroica pinus, D. fusca y D. virens) a mediados del siglo XIX e inicios del XX. Construimos modelos de las relaciones entre las aves y el hábitat con base en la literatura y conjuntos de datos de abundancia de aves y los aplicamos a los datos de vegetación ampliamente disponibles. Los registros topográficos de tierras públicas originales representaron las condiciones históricas del hábitat, y una combinación de datos del inventario forestal y de cobertura de suelo representaron las condiciones actuales. Evaluamos la robustez del modelo mediante la comparación de la distribución de hábitat actual con sitios de reproducción de aves registrados en el Wisconsin Breeding Bird Atlas. El modelo mostró poco cambio en la cantidad total de hábitat de Dendroica pinus, mientras que tanto D. fusca como D. virens han experimentado pérdidas sustanciales de hábitat. Para las especies examinadas, la calidad del hábitat se ha degradado desde antes de la colonización y la distribución espacial del hábitat cambió entre ecoregiones, con la expansión del rango acompañando la incursión de bosques en hábitats anteriormente abiertos o el reemplazo de bosques nativos con plantaciones de pinos. Las fuentes de pérdida y degradación de hábitats incluyen la pérdida de coníferas y de árboles grandes. Mediante la utilización de fuentes de datos ampliamente disponibles en un modelo de aptitud de hábitat, nuestro método proporciona un análisis a largo plazo de los cambios en el hábitat de aves y una referencia precolonización para evaluar prioridades de conservación actuales. [source] The importance of ecological research for ecosystem management: The case of browsing by swamp wallabies (Wallabia bicolor) in commercially harvested native forestsECOLOGICAL MANAGEMENT & RESTORATION, Issue 1 2004Julian Di Stefano Summary Ecosystem management often proceeds within the context of sub-optimal relationships between ecologists and ecosystem managers, and management outcomes could be improved with greater collaboration between members of these disciplines. This paper identifies an ecosystem management problem resulting from the interaction between timber harvesting and browsing wallabies, and this case study is used to exemplify how ecological data and expertise can contribute to the process of ecosystem management. It is argued that appropriate use of existing ecological data, establishment of strategic new research and the implementation of management actions as experimental hypothesis tests can facilitate achievement of management objectives, but greater collaboration between ecologists and managers is required before this can occur. Reasons for sub-optimal relationships are outlined, and the potential for structural change within large State-run ecosystem management agencies to improve interactions between managers and ecologists is discussed. [source] Fighting over the Forests: Environmental Conflict and Decision-making Capacity in Forest Planning ProcessesGEOGRAPHICAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2003Jean Hillier Abstract This paper tells a story of environmental conflict and the attempted political resolution of issues of planning for native forests in Western Australia. It refers to the Western Australian Regional Forest Agreement and Draft Forest Management Plan processes to demonstrate how a range of actors utilise vari-ous discourses and network relations in attempts to influence governmental decision-making capacity. Adapting elements of a model of capacity-building for environmental decision-making, the paper indicates how traditional exclusionary decision networks serve to inhibit decision capacity, whilst more inclusive processes may be more likely to cope with challenges of reconciling multiple values and decision-making for managing the forests in the interests of society as a whole. [source] Supplementary winter feeding of wild red deer Cervus elaphus in Europe and North America: justifications, feeding practice and effectivenessMAMMAL REVIEW, Issue 4 2004R. J. PUTMAN ABSTRACT 1.,Supplementary winter feeding of game animals, and particularly deer, is a common practice throughout northern (continental) Europe and parts of North America. Feeding is normally associated with maintaining high densities of animals for hunting, in terms of: (i) maintaining or increasing body weights and condition overwinter; (ii) improving reproductive performance and fertility; (iii) increasing overwinter survival; and (iv) reducing levels of damage caused to agriculture and forestry or the natural heritage. We consider the balance of evidence on the effectiveness of winter feeding of red deer Cervus elaphus in achieving these objectives. Where that evidence is equivocal, we attempt to reconcile apparent contradictions to evaluate the circumstances under which winter feeding may or may not be effective. 2.,In general, feeding of red deer on open range appears to have relatively little effect on body weights or fecundity. Effects on increasing antler size and quality are variable and seem to depend on the degree to which animals may be mineral limited on native range. Effects on survival are similarly ambiguous. It is apparent, however, that to be effective in reducing mortality, any supplementation is required early in the season and not simply when heavy mortalities are already being experienced. If provision of supplementary foods is delayed until animals are perceived already to be in poor condition, such feeding may have little effect. 3.,One of the primary goals of winter feeding in both Europe and the USA has become the prevention of environmental damage, particularly damage to commercial and native forests, while maintaining deer populations at densities suitable for hunting. Again, empirical evidence for effectiveness in this regard is inconclusive, with some studies showing a decrease in damage caused, some showing no effect and others showing a significant increase in local impact. 4.,There are equally a number of problems associated with the provision of supplementary feeds overwinter. Those animals which come to the feeding stations may develop a reliance on the food supplement provided, reducing intake of natural forages to near zero; where feed provided is less than 100% of daily requirement, such animals may regularly lose, rather than gain condition. Feed provision is also extremely uneven at such feeding stations; dominant stags displace younger stags and hinds from the feed provided until they have themselves finished feeding. Concentrations of high densities of animals around small feed-areas may also increase the risk of infection and lead to development of high parasite burdens. 5.,In an attempt to assess the current status and distribution of supplementary winter feeding in Scotland, a questionnaire was circulated to a number of individual across the country. Results of this survey are summarized and conclusions presented on the likely effectiveness of current feeding practices in achieving their aims. [source] Effects of invasive alien kahili ginger (Hedychium gardnerianum) on native plant species regeneration in a Hawaiian rainforestAPPLIED VEGETATION SCIENCE, Issue 1 2010V. Minden Abstract Questions: Does the invasive alien Hedychium gardnerianum (1) replace native understory species, (2) suppress natural regeneration of native plant species, (3) increase the invasiveness of other non-native plants and (4) are native forests are able to recover after removal of H. gardnerianum. Location: A mature rainforest in Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park on the island of Hawai'i (about 1200 m a.s.l.; precipitation approximately 2770 mm yr,1). Study sites included natural plots without effects of alien plants, ginger plots with a H. gardnerianum -dominated herb layer and cleared plots treated with herbicide to remove alien plants. Methods: Counting mature trees, saplings and seedlings of native and alien plant species. Using non-parametric H -tests to compare impact of H. gardnerianum on the structure of different sites. Results: Results confirmed the hypothesis that H. gardnerianum has negative effects on natural forest dynamics. Lower numbers of native tree seedlings and saplings were found on ginger-dominated plots. Furthermore, H. gardnerianum did not show negative effects on the invasive alien tree species Psidium cattleianum. Conclusions: This study reveals that where dominance of H. gardnerianum persists, regeneration of the forest by native species will be inhibited. Furthermore, these areas might experience invasion by P. cattleianum, resulting in displacement of native canopy species in the future, leading to a change in forest structure and loss of other species dependent on natural rainforest, such as endemic birds. However, if H. gardnerianum is removed the native Hawaiian forest is likely to regenerate and regain its natural structure. [source] Gut passage effect of the introduced red-whiskered bulbul (Pycnonotus jocosus) on germination of invasive plant species in MauritiusAUSTRAL ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2009JANNIE F. LINNEBJERG Abstract In Mauritius, many of the worst invasive plant species have fleshy fruits and rely on animals for dispersal. The introduced red-whiskered bulbul (Pycnonotus jocosus) feeds on many fleshy-fruited species, and often moves from invaded and degraded habitats into higher quality native forests, thus potentially acting as a mediator of continued plant invasion into these areas. Furthermore, gut passage may influence seed germination. To investigate this, we fed fleshy fruits of two invasive plant species, Ligustrum robustum and Clidemia hirta, to red-whiskered bulbuls. Gut passage times of seeds were recorded. Gut-passed seeds were sown and their germination rate and germination success compared with that of hand-cleaned seeds, as well as that of seeds in whole fruits. Gut passage and hand-cleaning had significant positive effects on germination of both species. Gut-passed seeds of both C. hirta and L. robustum germinated faster than hand-cleaned seeds. However, for L. robustum, this was only true when compared with hand-cleaned seeds with intact endocarp; when compared with hand-cleaned seeds without endocarp, there was no difference. For overall germination success, there was a positive effect of gut passage for C. hirta, but not for L. robustum. For both C. hirta and L. robustum, no seeds in intact fruits geminated, suggesting that removal of pulp is essential for germination. Our results suggest that, first, the initial invasion of native forests in Mauritius may not have happened so rapidly without efficient avian seed dispersers like the red-whiskered bulbul. Second, the bulbul is likely to be a major factor in the continued re-invasion of C. hirta and L. robustum into weeded and restored conservation management areas. [source] The abundance, distribution and structural characteristics of tree-holes in Nothofagus forest, New ZealandAUSTRAL ECOLOGY, Issue 8 2008TANYA J. BLAKELY Abstract Tree-holes provide an important microhabitat that is used for feeding, roosting and breeding by numerous species around the world. Yet despite their ecological importance for many of New Zealand's endangered species, few studies have investigated the abundance or distribution of tree-holes in native forests. We used complementary ground and climbed tree surveys to determine the abundance, distribution and characteristics of tree-holes in undisturbed Nothofagus forest in the Lewis Pass, New Zealand. We found that hole-bearing trees were surprisingly abundant compared with many other studies, including Australian Eucalyptus species and American beech. In fact, we estimated as many as 3906 tree-holes per hectare, of which 963 holes per hectare were potentially large enough to provide roost sites for hole-nesting bats in New Zealand, while only eight holes per hectare were potentially suitable for specialist hole-nesting birds. This was of great interest as primary cavity-excavating animals are absent from New Zealand forests, compared with North America and Australia. Moreover, tree-hole formation in New Zealand is likely to be dominated by abiotic processes, such as branch breakage from windstorms and snow damage. As has been found in many other studies, tree-holes were not uniformly distributed throughout the forest. Tree-holes were significantly more abundant on the least abundant tree species, Nothofagus fusca, than on either N. menziesii or N. solandri. In addition to tree species, tree size was also an important factor influencing the structural characteristics of tree-holes and their abundance in this forest. Moreover, these trends were not fully evident without climbed tree surveys. Our results revealed that ground-based surveys consistently underestimated the number of tree-holes present on Nothofagus trees, and illustrate the importance of using climbed inspections where possible in tree-hole surveys. We compare our results with other studies overseas and discuss how these are linked to the biotic and abiotic processes involved in tree-hole formation. We consider the potential implications of our findings for New Zealand's hole-dwelling fauna and how stand dynamics and past and future forest management practices will influence the structural characteristics of tree-holes and their abundance in remnant forest throughout New Zealand. [source] Coarse woody debris in Australian forest ecosystems: A reviewAUSTRAL ECOLOGY, Issue 8 2005GEMMA WOLDENDORP Abstract Coarse woody debris (CWD) is the standing and fallen dead wood in a forest and serves an important role in ecosystem functioning. There have been several studies that include estimates of CWD in Australian forests but little synthesis of these results. This paper presents findings from a literature review of CWD and fine litter quantities. Estimates of forest-floor CWD, snags and litter from the literature are presented for woodland, rainforest, open forest and tall open forest, pine plantation and native hardwood plantation. Mean mass of forest floor CWD in Australian native forests ranged from 19 t ha,1 in woodland to 134 t ha,1 in tall open forest. These values were generally within the range of those observed for similar ecosystems in other parts of the world. Quantities in tall open forests were found to be considerably higher than those observed for hardwood forests in North America, and more similar to the amounts reported for coniferous forests with large sized trees on the west coast of the USA and Canada. Mean proportion of total above-ground biomass as forest floor CWD was approximately 18% in open forests, 16% in tall open forests, 13% in rainforests, and 4% in eucalypt plantations. CWD can be high in exotic pine plantations when there are considerable quantities of residue from previous native forest stands. Mean snag biomass in Australian forests was generally lower than the US mean for snags in conifer forests and higher than hardwood forest. These results are of value for studies of carbon and nutrient stocks and dynamics, habitat values and fire hazards. [source] Factors affecting the occupation of a colony site in Sydney., New South Wales by the Grey-headed Flying-fox Pteropus poliocephalus (Pteropodidae)AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2001K. A. PARRY-JONES Abstract Previous authors have reported that Pteropus poliocephalus colony sites are occupied in response to blossom availability. However, in the present study it is reported that at the Gordon site in suburban Sydney, colony numbers were negatively correlated with the occurrence of pollen in the droppings. In addition, in contrast to reported occupational patterns at other colony sites, where flying-foxes are not present at the site during winter and early spring, the Gordon site was occupied by substantial numbers of flying-foxes throughout the entire period of 62 months from 1985 to 1990. As a result of the introduction of plants native to other parts of Australia and exotics from other continents, there is a variety of foods available throughout the year in the Sydney region, in comparison with less urbanized areas. This food supply permits the occupation of the Gordon colony site during winter and spring and reduces the migratory behaviour of flying-foxes throughout the year. It is concluded that in the absence of a restrictive food supply, the occupational pattern of the Gordon colony of P. poliocephalus is the result of the reproductive requirements of the species modified by the vagaries of blossom production in the native forests outside the foraging range of the colony. [source] Factors affecting the occupation of a colony site in Sydney, New South Wales by the Grey-headed Flying-fox Pteropus poliocephalus (Pteropodidae)AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2001K. A. Parry-Jones Abstract Previous authors have reported that Pteropus poliocephalus colony sites are occupied in response to blossom availability. However, in the present study it is reported that at the Gordon site in suburban Sydney, colony numbers were negatively correlated with the occurrence of pollen in the droppings. In addition, in contrast to reported occupational patterns at other colony sites, where flying-foxes are not present at the site during winter and early spring, the Gordon site was occupied by substantial numbers of flying-foxes throughout the entire period of 62 months from 1985 to 1990. As a result of the introduction of plants native to other parts of Australia and exotics from other continents, there is a variety of foods available throughout the year in the Sydney region, in comparison with less urbanized areas. This food supply permits the occupation of the Gordon colony site during winter and spring and reduces the migratory behaviour of flying-foxes throughout the year. It is concluded that in the absence of a restrictive food supply, the occupational pattern of the Gordon colony of P. poliocephalus is the result of the reproductive requirements of the species modified by the vagaries of blossom production in the native forests outside the foraging range of the colony. [source] Accounting for SGARAs: Towards Comparability and ConsistencyAUSTRALIAN ACCOUNTING REVIEW, Issue 2 2009Belinda Williams The objectives of this study were to examine whether consistency and comparability has been achieved through the introduction of AASB 1037 and the subsequent adoption of AASB 141. We find that consistency in measurement methods has not been achieved through the introduction of a prescribed accounting method under AASB 1037 and is not likely to be achieved through the application of AASB 141. Consistency was found however in the application of measurement methods over time and, in particular, in these SGARA types of native forests and plantation timber. The study contributes to an understanding of the issues faced by Australian firms surrounding the processes leading to the introduction of a new accounting standard. [source] The introduced English wasp Vespula vulgaris (L.) (Hymenoptera: Vespidae) newly recorded invading native forests in TasmaniaAUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 3 2000Robert W Matthews Abstract The social wasp Vespula vulgaris (L.), an introduced species that has caused extreme ecological damage in New Zealand, is reported from southern Tasmanian forests for the first time. In mainland Australia, this wasp has been present in the Melbourne area since 1958 and our retrospective analysis places it in Hobart since 1995. In the present paper, we document V. vulgaris in natural areas in southern Tasmania, well away from human habitation. Malaise trap samples collected since 1997 from nine sites at the Warra Long-term Ecological Research area in southern Tasmania revealed the widespread presence of both V. vulgaris and V. germanica (F.), another introduced species of concern. Analysis of microsatellite DNA markers showed no evidence of hybridisation between the two species. The potential impact of this newest social insect threat to Australian native biota is discussed. [source] |