首页期刊导航|The Journal of Applied Ecology
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The Journal of Applied Ecology
Blackwell Scientific Publications
The Journal of Applied Ecology

Blackwell Scientific Publications

0021-8901

The Journal of Applied Ecology/Journal The Journal of Applied Ecology
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    3页

    A monogenean parasite reveals the widespread translocation of the African clawed frog in its native range

    Anneke L. SchoemanLouis H. PreezNikol KmentováMaarten P. M. Vanhove...
    18页
    查看更多>>摘要:Abstract The management of bio‐invasions relies upon the development of methods to trace their origin and expansion. Cointroduced parasites, especially monogenean flatworms, are ideal tags for the movement of their hosts due to their short generations, direct life cycles and host specificity. However, they are yet to be applied to trace the intraspecific movement of host lineages in their native ranges. As proof of this concept, we conducted a comparative phylogeographic analysis based upon two mitochondrial markers of a globally invasive frog Xenopus laevis and its monogenean parasite Protopolystoma xenopodis in its native range in southern Africa and invasive range in Europe. Translocation of lineages was largely masked in the frog's phylogeography. However, incongruent links between host and parasite phylogeography indicated host switches from one host lineage to another after these were brought into contact in the native range. Thus, past translocation of host lineages is revealed by the invasion success of its cointroduced parasite lineage. This study demonstrates that parasite data can serve as an independent line of evidence in invasion biology, also on the intraspecific level, shedding light on previously undetected invasion dynamics. Based upon the distribution of these invasive parasite lineages, we infer that there is widespread anthropogenic translocation of this frog, not only via official export routes, but also facilitated by the frog's use as live bait by angling communities. Synthesis and applications. Data from cointroduced, host‐specific parasites, as tags for translocation, can add value to investigations in invasion biology and conservation. A better understanding of the translocation history and resulting genetic mixing of host and parasite lineages in the native range can shed light on the genetic make‐up of parasite assemblages cointroduced to the invasive range. Knowledge of the intraspecific movement of different lineages of animals in their native ranges also has conservation implications, since contact between divergent lineages of hosts and parasites can facilitate host switches and altered parasite dynamics in both native and invasive populations. Therefore, we recommend the inclusion of parasite data as a more holistic approach to the invasion ecology of animals on the intraspecific level.

    Applied autoethnography: A method for reporting best practice in ecological and environmental research

    Kilian J. MurphyLaura L. GriffinGrace NolanAmy Haigh...
    10页
    查看更多>>摘要:Abstract Applied research involves interactions between different organisations—academia, industry, government. Breakdowns in communication can occur during these interactions which alter a project's outcome. We omit how we encounter and overcome these problems from scientific manuscripts which mask the social and cultural considerations that are critical to a project's success. Autoethnography is a form of structured reflection whereby researchers use personal experience to contribute to understanding collaborative processes. We propose an applied form of autoethnography as a repeatable protocol to describe inter‐organisational interactions during the research process in ecology and environmental research. We demonstrate the use of this protocol with five case studies from a diversity of wildlife research across a wide variety of experience levels and scales from small mammals, large herbivores and predators to digital ecology. Our applied autoethnography protocol would ensure that specific biases and context are adequately described and that problems encountered and lessons learned from the experience are reflected upon. These reports can be presented as stand‐alone publications where appropriate, that is, to communicate an effective solution for a novel problem, or within the methods or supplementary material of manuscripts to further explain how the project developed from initial idea to final publication. Furthermore, this protocol can be used by practitioners to evaluate the trajectory of management decisions and policy implications in their jurisdiction to promote transparency and improve communication with stakeholders. Synthesis and Applications: Applied science will continue to intersect with organisations that help or hinder research efforts depending on cultural contexts and biases. Using adequate reflection on case studies to record these experiences and disseminate lessons to the wider community will improve how we approach problems in research, help us to avoid repeating mistakes and ultimately save time and resources. Outside of research, case studies derived from this protocol allow practitioners to holistically understand the methods, biases and challenges of the research from a new perspective, thus providing a novel knowledge brokering function between academia and practitioners in applied ecology.

    A call for refining the peatland restoration strategy in Europe

    Dominik ZakRobert J. McInnes
    7页
    查看更多>>摘要:Abstract Substantial amounts of money have been invested in peatland restoration over the last decades to address the current challenges of global changes and to enhance biodiversity. Given the magnitude of financial investments and the pressing societal needs, it is essential that appropriate decisions are made about the restoration techniques employed to avoid negative consequences and to optimise the benefits to human society. Based on the knowledge and expertise that has been developed over recent decades, three approaches to peatland restoration are discussed regarding their implications for climate change, nutrient fluxes and biodiversity: peatland inundation, topsoil removal and slow rewetting. Considered over the long term, for instance tens or hundreds of years, rewetted peatlands have the potential to fulfil multiple restoration goals, including those targeting climate change mitigation, water quality protection and species conservation. In short term, ill‐informed decisions on the approach to peatland restoration can generate negative impacts, for instance on the downstream water quality or radiative forcing gas emissions. Synthesis and application. The restoration of peatlands, and the trajectory that any restorative action may take, is a matter of societal choice; however, it is essential that society understands the broad potential benefits and disadvantages that such restoration may have so that evidence‐based choices can be made.

    Evidence for synergistic cumulative impacts of marking and hunting in a wildlife species

    Frédéric LeTourneuxGilles GauthierRoger PradelJosée Lefebvre...
    11页
    查看更多>>摘要:Abstract Nonadditive effects from multiple interacting stressors can have unpredictable outcomes on wildlife. Stressors that initially have negligible impacts may become significant if they act in synergy with novel stressors. Wildlife markers can be a source of physiological stress for animals and are ubiquitous in ecological studies. Their potential impacts on vital rates may vary over time, particularly when changing environments impose new stressors. In this study, we evaluated the temporal changes in the combined impact of two stressors, one constant (collar marking) and another one variable over time (hunting intensity), in greater snow geese (Anser caerulescens atlantica). Over a 30‐year period (1990–2019), hunting regulations were liberalized twice, in 1999 and 2009, with the instauration of special spring and winter hunting seasons respectively. We evaluated the effect of collars on goose survival through this period of changing hunting regulations. We compared annual survival of >20,000 adult females marked with and without neck collars using multi‐event capture–recapture models, and partitioned hunting from nonhunting mortality. Survival of geese marked with or without collars was similar in 1990–1998, before hunting regulations were liberalized (average survival [95% CI]: 0.87 [0.86, 0.89]). However, absolute survival of collared geese was 0.05 [0.03, 0.07] lower than that of noncollared geese between 1999 and 2009, and 0.12 [0.09, 0.15] lower after hunting regulations were liberalized further in 2009. Hunting and nonhunting mortality probabilities were both higher in collared birds compared to those without collars. The interaction between the effects of collars and hunting was synergistic because collars affected survival only after the hunting pressure increased significantly. These cumulated stresses probably reduced goose body condition sufficiently to increase their vulnerability to multiple sources of mortality.

    Contribution of wheat and maize to soil organic carbon in a wheat‐maize cropping system: A field and laboratory study

    Zheng‐Rong KanZhe ChenYu‐Xin WeiAhmad Latif Virk...
    14页
    查看更多>>摘要:Abstract Retention of crop biomass is widely recommended to improve soil organic carbon (SOC). However, the magnitude of contribution of above‐ground residues and below‐ground roots from C3 and C4 crops to SOC is unclear. Data from a 10‐year field experiment and a 60‐day laboratory incubation were synthesized to identify the respective contribution of C3 (e.g., wheat) and C4 (e.g., maize) residues and roots to SOC, as well as its underlying mechanisms under no‐till (NT) using 13C labelling trace in wheat‐maize rotations. The field experiment showed that residue retention significantly increased SOC accumulation, and SOC derived from wheat was 126.0% higher than that from maize. Conversion to NT promoted SOC derived from wheat and thus accumulated 17.6% higher SOC stock compared with plough tillage (PT) under residue returning at 0–20?cm soil depth (p?<?0.05). The data from laboratory incubation revealed the mechanisms that lower priming effects at 0–10?cm depth decreased total mineralization by 91.8% after inputs of wheat residues and roots compared with that of maize residues and roots, especially under NT compared with PT. Priming effects were negatively correlated with enzyme activities associated with the C recycle, SOC, and total nitrogen (TN) contents (p?<?0.01). NT increased enzyme activities, SOC, and TN contents and thus reduced priming effects and improved residual carbon. Synthesis and applications. These results suggested that wheat may contribute more to SOC accumulation than maize, and carbon increment efficiency in farmland could be enhanced by considering the crucial roles of C3 crops in SOC accumulation. NT practice sustains the benefits of C3 crops to SOC sequestration in the upper soil depths.

    Emerging stability of forest productivity by mixing two species buffers temperature destabilizing effect

    Renzo MottaThomas Nord‐LarsenFelipe BravoArne Nothdurft...
    12页
    查看更多>>摘要:Abstract The increasing disturbances in monocultures around the world are testimony to their instability under global change. Many studies have claimed that temporal stability of productivity increases with species richness, although the ecological fundamentals have mainly been investigated through diversity experiments. To adequately manage forest ecosystems, it is necessary to have a comprehensive understanding of the effect of mixing species on the temporal stability of productivity and the way in which it is influenced by climate conditions across large geographical areas. Here, we used a unique dataset of 261 stands combining pure and two‐species mixtures of four relevant tree species over a wide range of climate conditions in Europe to examine the effect of species mixing on the level and temporal stability of productivity. Structural equation modelling was employed to further explore the direct and indirect influence of climate, overyielding, species asynchrony and additive effect (i.e. temporal stability expected from the species growth in monospecific stands) on temporal stability in mixed forests. We showed that by adding only one tree species to monocultures, the level (overyielding: +6%) and stability (temporal stability: +12%) of stand growth increased significantly. We identified the key effect of temperature on destabilizing stand growth, which may be mitigated by mixing species. We further confirmed asynchrony as the main driver of temporal stability in mixed stands, through both the additive effect and species interactions, which modify between‐species asynchrony in mixtures in comparison to monocultures. Synthesis and applications. This study highlights the emergent properties associated with mixing two species, which result in resource efficient and temporally stable production systems. We reveal the negative impact of mean temperature on temporal stability of forest productivity and how the stabilizing effect of mixing two species can counterbalance this impact. The overyielding and temporal stability of growth addressed in this paper are essential for ecosystem services closely linked with the level and rhythm of forest growth. Our results underline that mixing two species can be a realistic and effective nature‐based climate solution, which could contribute towards meeting EU climate target policies.

    Disentangling the interrelated abiotic and biotic pathways linking landscape composition and crop production

    Frederik GeritsBert ReubensLies MesselyPallieter De Smedt...
    14页
    查看更多>>摘要:Abstract Landscape composition and its related functional agrobiodiversity (FAB) was severely simplified during the last decades. As landscape composition is expected to influence the interrelated microclimate and arthropod community at different scales, this simplification might have led to a decline in multiple agro‐ecosystem services, with potential impacts for the growth of crops with different demands from the environment. To study landscape‐scale effects on multicrop yield and herbivory in combination with its potential drivers, including functional arthropod community and microclimate, we used standardised 1?m2 mini‐gardens planted with ten different vegetable crops as phytometers. The gardens were installed at locations varying in surrounding landscape composition and the vegetables were selected to have contrasting requirements in terms of growing conditions, pollination services and susceptibility to pests. Monitoring of the mini‐gardens was performed in 2018 and 2019 in Flanders (Belgium). We found no relationship between landscape composition in a 500?m radius and crop yield. Considering possible mechanisms, we found that an increasing share of woody vegetation (>3?m high) in the surrounding landscape is important to buffer the temperature and soil moisture variation in the mini‐gardens. The share of agricultural land use and urban green (<3?m high) is, respectively, positively and negatively related with the activity‐density of natural enemies and pollinators. The growth of different crops responded differently to higher temperature ranges and we found no relation between natural enemies and herbivory. In conclusion, these abiotic and biotic pathways did not cause an overall relationship between landscape composition and yield. Synthesis and applications. These outcomes indicate that woody vegetation in the rural landscape buffers soil moisture and temperature variation, which will become even more important due to climate change. Furthermore, pollinators and natural enemies were most active in rural environments and less active in areas with residential green and built‐up surfaces. Local, flower rich habitat, such as road sides, can further support natural enemies and buffer soil moisture variation. Yet, high arthropod activity is no assurance for arthropod mediated ecosystem service delivery nor is microclimate buffering an assurance for higher crop yields.

    Using dietary metabarcoding analyses to characterise waterbirds–agriculture interactions

    Matthew W. PowerAmélie CorriveauMarcel KlaassenStephen T. Garnett...
    11页
    查看更多>>摘要:Abstract Globally, the use of agricultural fields by waterbirds has increased, resulting in conflicts with farmers. Designing effective management strategies to resolve these conflicts requires understanding the species' resource use. Dietary analyses can shed light on the extent of consumption of agricultural crops and surrounding natural resources, as well as the potential relationship between diet and an individual's body condition and ultimately its fitness. We examined the dietary composition of the tropical magpie goose Anseranas semipalmata, seasonally utilising a mixed natural‐agricultural landscape of northern Australia. We used DNA metabarcoding of intestinal contents from hunted geese to reconstruct individual diets and evaluated body condition from morphometric measurements. We compared the relative contribution of agricultural and natural foods to dietary composition, and investigated how this contribution varied spatially, temporally and among individuals that differed in body condition. We found that geese consumed both agricultural and naturally occurring plants assigned to at least 35 taxa. The most frequent and abundant taxa belonged to three families: Poaceae (grasses), Cyperaceae (sedges) and Anacardiaceae (mangoes). Dietary composition varied substantially among sampling sites and over time but not with body condition of geese. Synthesis and applications. We used a novel approach to investigate the diet of a waterbird perceived as problematic across an agricultural landscape in tropical Australia. We showed that individuals forage opportunistically, and that agricultural crops, while eaten, may not represent an essential part of geese diet across the study region. The knowledge acquired provides new insights into the species' foraging ecology offering clear alternatives for mitigating goose–agriculture interactions. Providing disturbance‐free alternative foraging areas or minimising the attractiveness of targeted agricultural fields (e.g. shorter grass, alternative ground cover) may alleviate crop consumption while benefiting the species' long‐term conservation. While also highlighting the limitations of DNA metabarcoding, our dietary study emphasises the potential of this methodology to improve our understanding of crop damage by wildlife, allowing effective evaluation of management requirements.

    Comparison of two machine learning frameworks for predicting aggregatory behaviour of sharks

    Michael W. WadeMark FisherPhilip Matich
    12页
    查看更多>>摘要:Abstract Ecological monitoring is critical for conservation efforts, particularly in marine ecosystems. Recently, greater emphasis on analyses of data resultant from long‐term ecological research has allowed for broader questions pertaining to climate change, species range shifts and reproductive phenology to be assessed, which may improve ecosystem management. Data collected via ecological monitoring, however, often feature strong class imbalances, complicating the development of models to predict such events. Here, we propose two modelling frameworks—a boosted regression tree (BRT) model and an artificial neural network (ANN)—for predicting exceptionally rare aggregatory behaviour of bull, Carcharhinus leucas and blacktip sharks, C. limbatus along the Gulf coast of Texas. In tandem with aggressive techniques for handling zero‐inflated data, both methods produced accurate predictions of aggregations of three or more individuals in one survey event, with the BRT outperforming the ANN in minimizing type I error. Additionally, both models maintained relatively high area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC AUC) values when the threshold for defining aggregative behaviour was raised, though there was a measurable drop‐off in the precision‐recall (PR) AUC at each successive threshold increase. These results provide support for both modelling approaches as highly viable in generating predictions based on monitoring data, even in situations where negative cases outweigh positive cases by more than 10‐fold. This is promising for conservation and management of species that exhibit biologically and ecologically significant, but rare, behaviours like aggregations, and species that are rare in abundance and thus vulnerable to future declines. More accurately predicting aggregation events provides the information necessary to improve the protection of species that gather during key life‐history events (e.g. mating, parturition, migration), and assess the spatiotemporal consistency of such events, thereby improving the efficacy of adaptive management. Synthesis and applications. Conservation and management programmes serve a critical role in maintaining the health of ecosystems, and regularly make use of ecological monitoring to collect data relevant to population studies. In marine systems, particularly, monitoring is often expensive and time‐consuming, which can result in incomplete or sparse datasets. Especially where an ecological event of interest is rare, subsequent analyses are particularly affected by the many limitations of zero‐inflated datasets. When training predictive models to classify these events, special care must be taken to avoid simply predicting negative events in every case. Here, we propose and compare two machine learning approaches: gradient boosting and the artificial neural network (ANN), to predict aggregatory behaviour of two shark species: bull, Carcharhinus leucas and blacktip sharks, C. limbatus in the Gulf of Mexico. Applied to a large dataset considering many spatial and environmental variables, and in tandem with negative case downsampling, our results support the application of each method to improve analyses of sparse monitoring datasets, with the gradient boosting machine performing particularly well in classifying positive cases.