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  1. Home
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Browsing by Subject "Invasive species"

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    Open Access
    Evaluating occupancy and the range dynamics of invasive bird species in South Africa
    (2022) Swingler, James; Distiller, Gregory; Clark, Allan
    There is great interest in the distribution of invasive species that threaten indigenous wildlife. All effective conservation management decisions need to be based on sound inference and predictions so that these species can be controlled and the risk posed to the local ecosystem minimized. Thus, there is significant benefit in the study of invasive species as a means of aiding those charged with protecting indigenous wildlife. The occupancy and population range dynamics of the Myna and Mallard species are individually investigated in the South African region by fitting static and dynamic occupancy models to a set of citizen science data for a 10-year study period between 2010-2019. The occupancy and detectability of the respective species is analysed using static occupancy models for the 2010 study season. The covariates included in the best fitting static models are used to estimate the initial occupancy and detection parameters for the dynamic models which now include estimates for colonization and local extinction. A sensitivity analysis pertaining to the dynamic models is implemented by altering the data structures in terms of the number of analysed sites and length of the detection histories. The results find the Myna's proximity to urban environments to play a significant role on its occupancy in 2010, and yearly changes in climatic and anthropogenic factors influence its 10-year range dynamics. The models fitted to the Mallard are inconclusive possibly due to the violation of the closure assumption potentially caused by migratory behaviour. The results are limited by the presence of a potentially migratory species when using a poorly designed study and highlights the difficulties of conducting an occupancy analysis on a highly mobile avian species as opposed to their sedentary counterpart. The workings of this dissertation support previous claims that an increase in the quantity of sites, and thus the degree of overlapping sites over the different seasons, will improve the precision of the model estimates. However, caution must be exercised when increasing the length of the seasonal detection histories and should generally be set to no more than 10 repeated visits to a site.
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    Feathered Detectives: real-time GPS tracking of scavenging gulls pinpoints illegal waste dumping
    (Public Library of Science, 2016) Navarro, Joan; Grémillet, David; Afán, Isabel; Ramírez, Francisco; Bouten, Willem; Forero, Manuela G
    Urban waste impacts human and environmental health, and waste management has become one of the major challenges of humanity. Concurrently with new directives due to manage this human by-product, illegal dumping has become one of the most lucrative activities of organized crime. Beyond economic fraud, illegal waste disposal strongly enhances uncontrolled dissemination of human pathogens, pollutants and invasive species. Here, we demonstrate the potential of novel real-time GPS tracking of scavenging species to detect environmental crime. Specifically, we were able to detect illegal activities at an officially closed dump, which was visited recurrently by 5 of 19 GPS-tracked yellow-legged gulls ( Larus michahellis ). In comparison with conventional land-based surveys, GPS tracking allows a much wider and cost-efficient spatiotemporal coverage, even of the most hazardous sites, while GPS data accessibility through the internet enables rapid intervention. Our results suggest that multi-species guilds of feathered detectives equipped with GPS and cameras could help fight illegal dumping at continental scales. We encourage further experimental studies, to infer waste detection thresholds in gulls and other scavenging species exploiting human waste dumps.
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    Large-scale spatial distribution patterns of gastropod assemblages in rocky shores
    (Public Library of Science, 2013) Miloslavich, Patricia; Cruz-Motta, Juan José; Klein, Eduardo; Iken, Katrin; Weinberger, Vanessa; Konar, Brenda; Trott, Tom; Pohle, Gerhard; Bigatti, Gregorio; Benedetti-Cecchi, Lisandro
    Gastropod assemblages from nearshore rocky habitats were studied over large spatial scales to (1) describe broad-scale patterns in assemblage composition, including patterns by feeding modes, (2) identify latitudinal pattern of biodiversity, i.e., richness and abundance of gastropods and/or regional hotspots, and (3) identify potential environmental and anthropogenic drivers of these assemblages. Gastropods were sampled from 45 sites distributed within 12 Large Marine Ecosystem regions (LME) following the NaGISA (Natural Geography in Shore Areas) standard protocol ( www.nagisa.coml.org ). A total of 393 gastropod taxa from 87 families were collected. Eight of these families (9.2%) appeared in four or more different LMEs. Among these, the Littorinidae was the most widely distributed (8 LMEs) followed by the Trochidae and the Columbellidae (6 LMEs). In all regions, assemblages were dominated by few species, the most diverse and abundant of which were herbivores. No latitudinal gradients were evident in relation to species richness or densities among sampling sites. Highest diversity was found in the Mediterranean and in the Gulf of Alaska, while highest densities were found at different latitudes and represented by few species within one genus (e.g. Afrolittorina in the Agulhas Current, Littorina in the Scotian Shelf, and Lacuna in the Gulf of Alaska). No significant correlation was found between species composition and environmental variables (r≤0.355, p>0.05). Contributing variables to this low correlation included invasive species, inorganic pollution, SST anomalies, and chlorophyll-a anomalies. Despite data limitations in this study which restrict conclusions in a global context, this work represents the first effort to sample gastropod biodiversity on rocky shores using a standardized protocol across a wide scale. Our results will generate more work to build global databases allowing for large-scale diversity comparisons of rocky intertidal assemblages.
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    Marine biodiversity in South Africa: an evaluation of current states of knowledge
    (Public Library of Science, 2010) Griffiths, Charles L; Robinson, Tamara B; Lange, Louise; Mead, Angela
    Continental South Africa has a coastline of some 3,650 km and an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of just over 1 million km 2 . Waters in the EEZ extend to a depth of 5,700 m, with more than 65% deeper than 2,000 m. Despite its status as a developing nation, South Africa has a relatively strong history of marine taxonomic research and maintains comprehensive and well-curated museum collections totaling over 291,000 records. Over 3 million locality records from more than 23,000 species have been lodged in the regional AfrOBIS (African Ocean Biogeographic Information System) data center (which stores data from a wider African region). A large number of regional guides to the marine fauna and flora are also available and are listed. The currently recorded marine biota of South Africa numbers at least 12,914 species, although many taxa, particularly those of small body size, remain poorly documented. The coastal zone is relatively well sampled with some 2,500 samples of benthic invertebrate communities have been taken by grab, dredge, or trawl. Almost none of these samples, however, were collected after 1980, and over 99% of existing samples are from depths shallower than 1,000 m--indeed 83% are from less than 100 m. The abyssal zone thus remains almost completely unexplored. South Africa has a fairly large industrial fishing industry, of which the largest fisheries are the pelagic (pilchard and anchovy) and demersal (hake) sectors, both focused on the west and south coasts. The east coast has fewer, smaller commercial fisheries, but a high coastal population density, resulting in intense exploitation of inshore resources by recreational and subsistence fishers, and this has resulted in the overexploitation of many coastal fish and invertebrate stocks. South Africa has a small aquaculture industry rearing mussels, oysters, prawns, and abalone--the latter two in land-based facilities. Compared with many other developing countries, South Africa has a well-conserved coastline, 23% of which is under formal protection, however deeper waters are almost entirely excluded from conservation areas. Marine pollution is confined mainly to the densely populated KwaZulu-Natal coast and the urban centers of Cape Town and Port Elizabeth. Over 120 introduced or cryptogenic marine species have been recorded, but most of these are confined to the few harbors and sheltered sites along the coast.
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    Stochastic Species Turnover and Stable Coexistence in a Species-Rich, Fire-Prone Plant Community
    (Public Library of Science, 2007) Thuiller, Wilfried; Slingsby, Jasper A.; Privett, Sean D. J.; Cowling, Richard M.
    Understanding the mechanisms that maintain diversity is important for managing ecosystems for species persistence. Here we used a long-term data set to understand mechanisms of coexistence at the local and regional scales in the Cape Floristic Region, a global hotspot of plant diversity. We used a dataset comprising 81 monitoring sites, sampled in 1966 and again in 1996, and containing 422 species for which growth form, regeneration mode, dispersal distance and abundances at both the local (site) and meta-community scales are known. We found that species presence and abundance were stable at the meta-community scale over the 30 year period but highly unstable at the local scale, and were not influenced by species' biological attributes. Moreover, rare species were no more likely to go extinct at the local scale than common species, and that alpha diversity in local communities was strongly influenced by habitat. We conclude that stochastic environmental fluctuations associated with recurrent fire buffer populations from extinction, thereby ensuring stable coexistence at the meta-community scale by creating a “neutral-like” pattern maintained by niche-differentiation.
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