Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Predator management'
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Waterworth, Rebeccah Anne. "Overcoming barriers to predation effect of alternative management practices on predator-herbivore dynamics in production nurseries /." College Park, Md. : University of Maryland, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1903/2936.
Full textThesis research directed by: Dept. of Entomology. Title from t.p. of PDF. Includes bibliographical references. Published by UMI Dissertation Services, Ann Arbor, Mich. Also available in paper.
Supriatna, Asep K. "Optimal harvesting theory for predator-prey metapopulations /." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1998. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09phs959.pdf.
Full textDdumba, Hassan. "Repulsive-attractive models for the impact of two predators on prey species varying in anti-predator response." Thesis, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1010995.
Full textGo, Dong-Hun. "Three Essays in Economics of Prey-Predator Relation." DigitalCommons@USU, 2018. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/7031.
Full textSöderström, Bo. "Farmland birds in semi-natural pastures : conservation and management /." Uppsala : Swedish Univ. of Agricultural Sciences (Sveriges lantbruksuniv.), 1999. http://epsilon.slu.se/avh/1999/91-576-5463-8.pdf.
Full textElswick, Samuel Taylor. "Predator Management and Colonial Culture, 1600-1741: A Study in Historical Ecology." W&M ScholarWorks, 2005. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539626482.
Full textMoosa, Naseera. "An updated model of the krill-predator dynamics of the Antarctic ecosystem." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25490.
Full textGentle, Matthew Nikolai. "Factors Affecting The Efficiency Of Fox (Vulpes Vulpes) Baiting Practices On The Central Tablelands Of New South Wales." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/890.
Full textGentle, Matthew Nikolai. "Factors Affecting The Efficiency Of Fox (Vulpes Vulpes) Baiting Practices On The Central Tablelands Of New South Wales." University of Sydney, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/890.
Full textThe European red fox (Vulpes vulpes L.) is a well known predator of native species and domestic stock, and is recognised as one of Australia’s most devastating vertebrate pests. Current fox management relies heavily on poisoning using baits impregnated with sodium monofluoroacetate (1080). This reliance on 1080 is likely to continue given the lack of viable alternatives for controlling foxes, so that, in the meanwhile, it is important to improve the efficiency of the current techniques. Factors affecting the susceptibility of individual foxes to bait include their ability to locate it, as well as the bait’s palatability and toxicity. The economic costs associated with using different bait types, the pattern and density of their distribution will also affect the efficiency of control programs. It is essential to examine and refine all such issues to ensure efficient use of the 1080 baiting technique. This thesis focuses generally on problems associated with management of the fox in eastern Australia. More specifically, I investigate the factors affecting the efficiency of fox baiting practices on the central tablelands of New South Wales. The study was conducted largely on agricultural lands near the town of Molong (33010’ 37”S, 148087’15”E) on the central tablelands of New South Wales. This area was chosen as it is broadly representative, in terms of land use, of a large region of eastern Australia. The highly modified, predominantly agricultural landscapes near Molong are well suited to foxes, and conflict with the predominantly pastoral community means that fox management is widely undertaken. I determined the persistence of 1080 in two commonly used bait types, Foxoff® and chicken wingettes, under different climatic and rainfall conditions. The rate of 1080 degradation did not change significantly between the central tablelands and the relatively hotter and drier western slopes. Foxoff® baits remained lethal for longer than wingettes under all conditions, although their rate of degradation generally increased with increasing rainfall. I confirmed the presence of defluorinating micro-organisms in thesoils of eastern Australia for the first time, and suggest that, following removal from the bait, 1080 would not persist in the environment for long. Bait should be attractive and highly palatable to ensure that the target species will find and consume it upon discovery. Caching, where discovered food is removed but not immediately consumed, may potentially reduce the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of baiting campaigns. I quantified the caching of chicken wingette, day-old chick and Foxoff® baits by inserting transmitters into bait material and assessing whether it was eaten or cached following removal. The intensity of caching did not change significantly between seasons. Type of bait had the largest influence on caching intensity, with a greater percentage of non-toxic Foxoff® baits (66.9%) being cached than either wingettes (5.7%) or day-old chicks (4.5%). The percentage of toxic (1080) baits cached was even greater, suggesting that 1080 bait may be less palatable, and detectable to foxes. I also investigated the use of conditioned taste aversion to reduce multiple bait uptake by foxes. Levamisole, an illness-inducing chemical, was added to bait and the fate of removed bait was again monitored via radio-telemetry. Following consumption of a levamisole-treated bait, foxes avoided eating treated baits but consumed untreated baits. I concluded that a reduction in bait consumption was achieved through learned aversion to levamisole rather than via conditioned taste aversion to baits. Adding levamisole to baits, especially non-toxic bait such as rabies vaccines, could potentially be used to reduce bait monopolisation by individual foxes. Fox density and den site preferences were assessed by investigating the distribution and density of fox natal dens on one property (9.6 km2) over three consecutive years. A total of 9 natal dens were located in 2000 and 2001, declining to 6 in 2002. No preference was shown for den sites on the basis of habitat, slope or aspect, but more dens were located under, or adjacent to cover. Assuming that each natal den represents a breeding pair and that the population sex ratio did not differ from parity (1:1), the site contained a prebreeding density of 1.9 foxes/km2 in 2000 and 2001, and 1.25 foxes/km2 in 2002. Given that the mean number of cubs is 4.0, the post-breeding density was estimated at 5.6 and 3.75 foxes/km2 in 2000/2001 and 2002, respectively. The results demonstrated that high densities of foxes occur on agricultural lands. The success and likely accuracy of the technique to monitor fox density suggests that it may be used to calibrate more efficient abundance estimates that will be essential for the strategic management of foxes in future. Pest animal management strategies are traditionally assessed for their effectiveness, with less consideration being given to the efficiency or cost of achieving the desired effect. I used cost-effectiveness analyses to compare between different baiting strategies based on the longevity, palatability and handling/replacement costs associated with each bait type. The results indicated that, when measured on a total cost-per-bait-consumed basis, wingettes and day-old chicks were the most cost-effective baits for campaigns of up to 4 weeks duration. This demonstrates the importance of including the longevity, and particularly the palatability of bait, when assessing cost-effectiveness. However, it is recognised that other factors, including the consistency of dosage and uptake by nontarget species, may be equally or more important in deciding the appropriate baiting strategy. The spatial and temporal application of fox baiting in the region overseen by the Molong Rural Lands Protection Board was examined between January 1998 and December 2002 as a case study to evaluate the apparent effectiveness of cooperative management practices. Most landholders (78.8%) did not bait for foxes during this period. Based on known dispersal distances, the effect of fox immigration into baited areas was determined. The results indicated that no areas baited for foxes were separated by a sufficient buffer distance (>9.58 km) from unbaited areas to be protected from fox immigration. This suggests that, at current levels of coordination, the effectiveness of most baiting operations in eastern Australia is compromised over the long term by fox immigration. However, it is recognised that short-term reductions in fox density may sometimes be all that are required to reduce predation to acceptable levels, especially for seasonally-susceptible prey. Ultimately, the cost-effectiveness of control should be evaluated in terms of the response of the prey rather than that of the predator. This study has highlighted deficiencies in current ‘best-practice’ baiting techniques. Specific recommendations for current baiting practices, in addition to future research, are also given. In brief, these include minimising free-feed baiting, increasing the minimum distance between bait stations, and, where possible, presenting the most palatable bait. Continued research into conditioned taste aversion, aerial baiting, and techniques to reduce caching are recommended as potential techniques to improve the efficiency of baiting practices.
Martins, de Lucena Flavia. "Species interaction in fish stock assessment and management in southern Brazil : a bio-economic approach." Thesis, University of East Anglia, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.327604.
Full textDrouilly, Marine Justine. "Characteristics, determinants and management of farmer-predator conflict in a multi-use dryland system, South Africa." Doctoral thesis, Faculty of Science, 2019. https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31707.
Full textRichardson, Isabelle M. G. "Predator exclosures, a management technique to increase piping plover (charadrius melodus) reproductive success in the Canadian prairies." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp01/MQ40100.pdf.
Full textCavalcanti, Sandra Maria Cintra. "Predator-Prey Relationships and Spatial Ecology of Jaguars in the Southern Pantanal, Brazil: Implications for Conservation and Management." DigitalCommons@USU, 2008. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/112.
Full textGrau, Paricio Carlos. "Influence of predator and food chemical cues in the behaviour of the house mouse (Mus musculus)." Thesis, Toulouse, INPT, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019INPT0068/document.
Full textRodent commensal species produce great damage in agriculture and urban areas. As invasive species they can endanger local species and are carriers and vectors of several important zoonoses. Control methods rely mainly on the use of warfarins, which can be inadvertently be taken up by untargeted species. Warfarins have also lost their efficacy in rodents due to the development of genetic resistance. In addition, these methods are considered inhumane as they cause a slow and painful death due to haemorrhages. Olfaction is a main source for environmental risk assessment by rodents, and it can be used to modify their use of space. My aim in this thesis was to identify behavioural reactions of the house mouse (Mus musculus), using laboratory strains as models of wild animals, to ecologically meaningful chemical messages, including predator and plant chemical olfactory cues. My results showed that mice avoided complex ferret olfactory cues and ethanol which is a ubiquitous chemical related to fruit rotting and ripening. The feline protein Fel d 1, which belongs to the secretoglobin family and is a major cat allergen in humans, did not elicit significant avoidance or alter foraging behaviour in mice. However, Trimethylthiazoline purified from fox faeces, elicited clear avoidance behaviour and stress responses. I carried out a bibliographic review to evaluate and discuss rodent pest control methods from an ethical standpoint. This literature showed that many of the current methods of pest control are considered inhumane, and do not tally with current society concerns and welfare standards in other domains such as farms or laboratory animals. These results raise new research questions to identify ferret and plant chemical compounds that can induce rodent avoidance, and to carry out next stage of research with wild animals both under laboratory and field conditions
Hellner, Qarin. "Simultaneous MSY management of a predator and prey species, the Cod (Gadus morhua) and Herring (Clupea harengus) in the Baltic Sea." Thesis, Högskolan i Skövde, Institutionen för vård och natur, 2012. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:his:diva-7008.
Full textEuropeiska kommissionen förvaltar fiskbestånden genom att tillämpa fiskekvoter baserat på konceptet maximalt hållbart uttag. Hittills har de flesta maximalt hållbara fiske-fångst modeller för Östersjön fokuserat på en art i taget. De få befintliga fler-arts-modeller har antagit att en arts mognad och tillväxt är beroende av tillgången på föda. Vår två-arts-modell gör det möjligt att undersöka om det finns en konflikt mellan maximal hållbar fiske-fångst på torsk och sill i Östersjön. Denna två-arts-modell med torsk som ett rovdjur och sill som byte, tar hänsyn till miljön som drivkraft på deras rekrytering. I torskmodellen ingick reproduktiv volym tillsammans med årlig tillväxt (ett års specifika effekt på tillväxten beroende av externa variabler som tillgången till föda) och predation av gråsäl. Sill-modellen var beroende av årlig tillväxt och lekbeståndets biomassa hos torsk. Resultaten visar att den viktigaste faktorn som påverkar maximalt hållbart uttag för torsk är reproduktiv volym. Lekbeståndets biomassa vid maximalt hållbart uttag är mer känsligt för förändringar i reproduktiv volym än årlig tillväxt. När predation från säl tillsätts och höga gynnsamma miljöfaktorer råder är lekbeståndets biomassa 50 % jämfört med lekbeståndets biomassa vid höga gynnsamma miljöeffekter utan säl predation. Fyra simuleringar gav hög lekbestånds biomassa för torsk vilket var förödande för sillpopulationen som utrotades pga. högt predationstryck. Sillens maximala hållbara uttag beror på mängden lekbestånds biomassa hos torsk, d.v.s. effekten av hög eller låg reproduktiv volym. Två analyser gjordes på nuvarande miljömässiga nivåer för båda arterna. Den första analysen hade en naturlig dödlighet på 0,2 för torsk, vilket gav en fiske-mortalitet på 0,20 och maximalt hållbart uttag på 410 000 ton. Sillen hade en fiske-mortalitet på 0,03 och maximalt hållbart uttag på 11 000 ton. I den andra simuleringen ingår sälpredation på torsk vilket minskade torskens maximala hållbara uttag med 98 % vid en fiske-mortalitet på 0,02, vilket gav en fiske-mortalitet på 0,19 och maximalt hållbart uttag på 275 000 ton för sill. Detta ger en ökning av maximalt hållbart uttag för sill 25 gånger jämfört med resultatet utan predation på torsk. Torskens populationsdynamik är sårbar för miljöförändringar och för att säkra ett sunt och produktivt torskbestånd bör fiskemortaliteten hållas i fas med nuvarande reproduktiva volym.
Kautz, Andrea R. "Local Management and Landscape Effects on the Predator Guild in Vegetable Crops, with a Focus on Long-legged Flies (Diptera: Dolichopodidae)." The Ohio State University, 2015. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1437474798.
Full textKock, Alison Ann. "Behavioural ecology of white sharks carcharodon carcharias in False Bay, South Africa: towards improved management and conservation of a threatened apex predator." Doctoral thesis, University of Cape Town, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8803.
Full textThe coastal waters off South Africa support a significant proportion of the global white shark population, with at least four well-established coastal aggregation sites. How critical these sites are to the southern African and hence global white shark population depends to a large extent, on their levels of residency a nd site fidelity, in relation to potential threats. Here, I attempt to provide such data by studying the annual and seasonal presence of white sharks in False Bay. From 1 April 2004 - 31 December 2007, a total of 68 (46 female, 22 male) sharks, ranging in length from 1.7 to 5 m, were tagged with acoustic transmitters and monitored on an array of 30 receivers, distributed along the Inshore region of False Bay and at Seal Island, for a maximum of 1349 days. I used generalized linear mixed effects models to investigate the effects of season, habitat type, sex, size and time of day on shark presence. Most tagged sharks were immature animals, some of which were detected in the Bay in all months and across all years. In autumn and winter, males and females aggregated around Seal Island, where they fed predominantly on young-of-the-year seals. Sharks, regardless of sex or size, over-dispersed on the South side of the Island at sunrise, where the probability of encountering predator-naïve seals was highest. Shark presence at Seal Island mirrored the spatial distribution of predation around the Island, which was highest on the South side within 400 m of the Island, and at sunrise. In spring and summer, there was marked sexual segregation in presence, with females frequenting the Inshore areas and males seldom being detected in the Bay . Within the Inshore region, female white sharks showed a preference for beach, compared to rocky, mixed and harbour habitats. The preference for beach habitat likely reflects a combination of high prey availability, in addition to an open habitat suitable for detecting and securing prey. Overall, the results confirm False Bay as a critical area for white shark conservation as both sexes, across a range of sizes, show high levels of fidelity to the Bay.
Swan, George Julius Fraser. "Understanding conservation conflicts surrounding predation and game shooting interests." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10871/32644.
Full textMalpass, Jennifer S. "Effects of food and vegetation on breeding birds and nest predators in the suburban matrix." The Ohio State University, 2015. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1446725882.
Full textWhitwell, Sarah Margaret. "The impact of isolation from mammalian predators on the anti-predator behaviours of the North Island robin (Petroica longipes) : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Conservation Biology at Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand." Massey University, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10179/1142.
Full textPorto, Morgana Maria Fonseca. "Stop and smell the weeds: an approach to attract and conserve predatory coccinellids in tomato." Universidade Federal de Viçosa, 2013. http://locus.ufv.br/handle/123456789/3977.
Full textConselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico
O manejo de habitat, uma abordagem do controle biológico conservativo, o tem como objetivo alterar habitats através da manipula ção de recursos de origem vegetal na paisagem para melhorar a disponibilidade de recursos para os inimigos naturais. As plantas daninhas têm sido amplamente usadas para esse fim em agroecossistemas devido ao seu potencial de fornecer recursos al- ternativos para os inimigos naturais, mesmo quando as densidades de pragas são baixas. No entanto, há uma escassez de informações relativas aos recursos fornecidos por plantas daninhas e suas interações com os inimigos naturais. Para que o manejo de habitat seja uma prática funcional, ́é necessário o conhecimento detalhado do comportamento de forrageamento e da capacidade sensorial de inimigos naturais. A fim de contribuir para esse entendimento, estudei a atratividade e os efeitos de recursos fornecidos pela planta daninha Bidens pilosa, conhecida como picão-preto, utilizando plantas de tomate como a cultura principal, para o predador generalista Cycloneda sanguinea. As fêmeas de C. sanguinea são capazes de reconhecer os sinais químicos do picão-preto, mas elas não discriminam entre os estímulos do picão-preto ou das plantas de tomate. No campo, a ocorrência de C. sanguinea no picão-preto não depende da presença de pulgoẽs e isso só é evolutivamente estável a se a joaninha obtém vantagens da visita na planta. Os recursos alternativos fornecidos pelo picão-preto e pelas plantas de tomate, em conjunto ou não, não afetou a taxa de oviposição de C. sanguinea, tanto na presença quanto na ausência de pulgões. Entretanto, uma dieta com apenas os recursos fornecidos pelas plantas testadas aqui não é suficiente para promover a a sua oviposição. Porém, estes recursos podem aumentar a sobrevivência de casais de joaninhas adultas de forma significativa. A sobrevivência de C. e sanguinea foi significativamente maior na combinação picão-preto e plantas de tomate do que no tomate sozinho, mas não foi diferente do picão-preto somente. Concluindo, C. sanguinea pode usar pistas químicas do picão-preto durante o forrageamento e os recursos oferecidos pela planta podem permitir que este predador persista no campo quando os recursos-presa são escassos, o que pode levar a uma melhora na sua eficiência como agente de controle e biológico.
Habitat management is a conservation biological control approach that aims to alter habitats through manipulating plant-based resources in the landscape to increase the availability of resources for natural enemies. Weed commu- nities have been adopted for habitat management in agroecosystems due to their potential to supply food resources to natural enemies, even when pest densities are low. However, there is a paucity of information pertaining to the resources provided by non-crop weeds and their interactions with natural enemies. To make the management of non-crop weeds a functional practice, detailed knowledge of the behavior and sensory ability of natural enemies is necessary. In order to contribute to such understanding, I studied the attrac- tiveness and the effects of resources provided by the weed hairy beggarticks (non-crop), using tomato plant as the main crop, on the generalist predator Cycloneda sanguinea. I found that C. sanguinea females are able to recognize cues from hairy beggarticks but they do not discriminate between cues from hairy beggarticks or tomato plants. In the field, the occurrence of C. san- guinea on hairy beggarticks plants does not depend on the presence of aphids and it is only evolutionary stable if the ladybird gains advantage from visiting the plant. The alternative resources provided by the hairy beggarticks and tomato plants, either together or separate, did not affect the oviposition rate of C. sanguinea, both in the presence and absence of aphid prey. Hence, a diet with only the resources provided by the plants is not enough to promote their oviposition. Nevertheless, these resources were found to increase adult survivorship significantly. Survival of C. sanguinea was significantly higher on the combination of tomato plants plus hairy beggarticks than on tomato plants alone but was not different from hairy beggarticks alone. Concluding, C. sanguinea can use cues from hairy beggarticks when foraging and the re- sources offered by plants may allow them to persist in the field when prey resources are scarce which might improve its efficiency as biological control agent.
Klug, Page Elizabeth. "Interactions between grassland birds and their snake predators : the potential for conservation conflicts in the Tallgrass prairie." Diss., Manhattan, Kan. : Kansas State University, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/2184.
Full textRothenwöhrer, Christoph [Verfasser], Teja [Akademischer Betreuer] Tscharntke, Stefan [Akademischer Betreuer] Vidal, and Stefan [Akademischer Betreuer] Scheu. "Plant-herbivore-predator communities and grassland management intensity - Implications for biodiversity conservation practices on local and landscape scales / Christoph Rothenwöhrer. Gutachter: Stefan Vidal ; Stefan Scheu. Betreuer: Teja Tscharntke." Göttingen : Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Göttingen, 2013. http://d-nb.info/1044048131/34.
Full textPeterson, Zachary James. "Quantifying patterns and select correlates of the spatially and temporally explicit distribution of a fish predator (Blue Catfish, Ictalurus furcatus) throughout a large reservoir ecosystem." Thesis, Kansas State University, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/20119.
Full textDivision of Biology
Martha E. Mather
Understanding how and why fish distribution is related to specific habitat characteristics underlies many ecological patterns and is crucial for effective research and management. Blue Catfish, Ictalurus furcatus, are an important concern for many fisheries agencies; however, lack of information about their distribution and habitat use remains a hindrance to proper management. Here, over all time periods and across months, I quantified Blue Catfish distribution and environmental correlates of distribution in Milford Reservoir, the largest reservoir in Kansas. I tested relationships among acoustically tagged Blue Catfish and three groups of variables postulated to influence Blue Catfish distribution in the literature (i. localized microhabitat variables, ii. larger-scale mesohabitat variables, iii. biotic variables). Blue Catfish were consistently aggregated in two locations of the reservoir across five months during summer and fall, 2013. Using multiple linear regression and an information theoretic model selection approach, consistent correlates of distribution included localized, microhabitat variables (i.e., dissolved oxygen, slope) larger-scale, mesohabitat variables (i.e., distance to channel, river kilometer from the dam) and a biotic variable (i.e., Secchi depth). This research identified which 5 of the 12 variables identified in the literature were most influential in determining Blue Catfish distribution. As a guide for future hypothesis generation and research, I propose that Blue Catfish distribution was driven by three ecologically-relevant tiers of influence. First, Blue Catfish avoided extremely low dissolved oxygen concentrations that cause physiological stress. Second, Blue Catfish aggregated near the channel, an area of bathymetric heterogeneity that may offer a foraging advantage. Third, Blue Catfish aggregated near low Secchi depths, shown here to be associated with increased productivity and prey abundance. Building on my results, future research into the distribution and habitat use of Blue Catfish should incorporate aggregated distributions of fish into research designs, focus on how both small and large scale relationships interact to produce patterns of distribution, and explore further the mechanisms, consequences, and interactions among the three tiers of influence identified here.
Kekulthotuwage, Don Shamika Prasadini. "Novel mathematical models and simulation tools for stochastic ecosystems." Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2022. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/229974/1/Shamika%20Prasadini_Kekulthotuwage%20Don_Thesis.pdf.
Full textGieder, Katherina Dominique. "Assessing the Effects of Sea-Level Rise on Piping Plover (Charadrius Melodus) Nesting Habitat, and the Ecology of a Key Mammalian Shorebird Predator, on Assateague Island." Diss., Virginia Tech, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/56573.
Full textPh. D.
Nuvoloni, Felipe Micali. ""Influência da vegetação nativa de Mata Atlântica sobre a ocorrência e distribuição de ácaros (Acari) da seringueira (Hevea brasiliensis Muell Arg.) no estado da Bahia" /." São José do Rio Preto : [s.n.], 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/11449/87662.
Full textBanca: André Luis Matioli
Banca: Rodrigo Damasco Daud
Resumo: Plantas nativas podem servir como reservatório para ácaros predadores que também são encontrados em plantas cultivadas. Fragmentos florestais presentes na borda de seringais podem influenciar positivamente a ocorrência de ácaros predadores no seringal, pois esses podem se deslocar da vegetação nativa para as seringueiras e vice-versa. O objetivo desse estudo foi conhecer as espécies de ácaros associadas às plantas nativas de Mata Atlântica, que ocorrem próximas a seringais na região sul da Bahia, com ênfase nas espécies predadoras. As coletas foram qualitativas em três áreas: uma que faz limite com a borda do seringal, e duas em que as plantas nativas adentram o interior do seringal. Foram registradas 164 espécies representando 24 famílias, sendo as famílias Phytoseiidae e Tarsonemidae aquelas com o maior número de espécies registradas. Schefflera sp. (Araliaceae) foi a planta que abrigou a maior riqueza de ácaros predadores (19) e também o maior número de fitoseídeos (8). Essa elevada riqueza de predadores pode ser um indicativo de sua importância em servir como reservatório para esses ácaros. O grande número de espécies acarinas registradas nesse estudo ressalta a importância deste bioma como um dos centros mundiais de biodiversidade
Abstract: Native trees can be used as reservoir by predators mites that live in crops. Forest fragments located in the edge of rubber tree crops can influence helpfully the occurrence of predators mites in the rubber tree crops, because they can move from native vegetation to the rubber trees. In this study we assessed the mites species that live associated with native plants of the Atlantic Rainforest, neighboring to rubber tree crops from southern of the Bahia State, with emphasis in the predators species. The samples were qualitative and taken monthly from May 2008 to April 2009 in three areas: one these is located on the border of rubber tree crop and two whose native plants had within the rubber tree crop. We registered 164 mite species belonging to 24 families. Phytoseiidae and Tarsonemidae were the families with the higher number of species. Schefflera sp. (Araliaceae) was the native tree with the richest fauna of predators (19) and phytoseiid mites (8). This high richness can indicates its importance like a reservoir of these species of mites.. The high number of mites species found in this study highlights the great importance of this biome as a worldwide hotspot
Mestre
Owen, Jenny. "Provision of habitat for black grouse Tetrao tetrix in commercial forest restocks in relation to their management." Thesis, University of Stirling, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1893/3444.
Full textGustafson, Tomas. "Bird communities and vegetation on Swedish wet meadows : importance of management regimes and landscape composition /." Uppsala : Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, 2006. http://diss-epsilon.slu.se/archive/00001234/.
Full textTitle from PDF file as viewed on 11/28/2006. Includes bibliographical references. Also available in print. Print version includes appendices.
Dinkins, Jonathan B. "Common raven density and greater sage-grouse nesting success in southern Wyoming| Potential conservation and management implications." Thesis, Utah State University, 2013. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3587560.
Full textMy research was focused on greater sage-grouse ( Centrocercus urophasianus; hereafter "sage-grouse") nest-site selection, nest success, and hen survival in relation to avian predators. The trade-off between using habitat and avoiding predators is a common decision for prey species including sage-grouse. In Chapter 2, I compared avian predator densities at sage-grouse nest and brood locations to random locations. Sage-grouse were located where densities of small, medium, and large avian predators were 65-68% less than random locations.
The effects of anthropogenic and landscape features on habitat use of sage-grouse hens have not been evaluated relative to avian predator densities. In Chapter 3, I compared anthropogenic and landscape features and avian predator densities among sage-grouse locations (nest, early-brood, late-brood) and random locations. I found sage-grouse hens chose locations with lower avian predator densities compared to random locations, and selected locations farther away from anthropogenic and landscape features.
Depredation of sage-grouse nests can be an influential factor limiting their productivity. Predator removal has been simultaneously proposed and criticized as a potential mitigation measure for low reproductive rates of sage-grouse. In Chapter 4, I hypothesized that sage-grouse nest success would be greater in areas where Wildlife Services lowered common raven ( Corvus corax: hereafter "raven") density. I found that Wildlife Services decreased raven density by 61% during 2008–2011 but I did not detect a direct improvement to sage-grouse nest success. However, sage-grouse nest success was 22% when ravens were detected within 550 m of a sage-grouse nest and 41% when no raven was detected within 550 m. In Chapter 5, I assessed interactive effects of corvid densities relative to anthropogenic and landscape features on sage-grouse nest success. I found that sage-grouse nest success was positively correlated with rugged habitat.
Survival of breeding-age birds is the most important demographic parameter driving sage-grouse abundance. In Chapter 6, I evaluated the effect of raptor densities, proximity to anthropogenic and landscape features, and hen behavior on survival of sage-grouse hens. I found that sage-grouse hen survival was negatively correlated with golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos) density, proximity to anthropogenic and landscape features, and hen parental investment (nesting and brood-rearing).
Shortridge, Megan G. Shortridge. "Diet Analysis of Maumee River Fishes using Cytochrome C Oxidase (COI) DNA Metabarcoding ― Insights into a Critical Time of Year." Bowling Green State University / OhioLINK, 2016. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1471540717.
Full textKennedy, Sara I. "White-tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus) Fawn Survival and Seasonal Movement Patterns of White-tailed Deer and Coyotes (Canis latrans) in the Cleveland Metropolitan Area." The Ohio State University, 2015. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1449221457.
Full textKinney, Kaitlin Alyse. "The role of biotic resistance through predation on the invasion success of the green porcelain crab (Petrolisthes armatus) into nearshore oyster reef communities." The Ohio State University, 2017. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1511958324786017.
Full textCarter, Stephen Paul. "Habitat refuges and the management of predators for conservation." Thesis, Royal Holloway, University of London, 2002. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.269793.
Full textWoodford, Darragh J. "Riverscape-mediated effects of introduced trout on non-diadromous galaxiid fishes in New Zealand." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Biological Sciences, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/3284.
Full textDunkley, Felicity Ann. "Management options for hedgerow vegetation : combining weed control with habitat improvement for predatory arthropods." Thesis, University of Southampton, 1997. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.241946.
Full textBrichler, Kirsten Nicole. "Effects of Farm Management Practices on Pest Slugs and Slug Predators in Field Crops." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/98469.
Full textMaster of Science in Life Sciences
Invasive slug species the gray field slug, Deroceras reticulatum (Muller), and the marsh slug, Deroceras laeve, are major pests of maize and soybean grown in Virginia no-till systems. Slug feeding causes injury to young plants that, when severe, can reduce crop yield and necessitate replanting a field. Chemical control options are limited, and farmers may not be willing to use tillage as a control measure. Conserving arthropod slug predators may suppress pest populations below economic levels. Research is needed to understand how farming methods such as tillage type (e.g., no-till, strip tillage, vertical tillage) and cover crop use affect slugs and their predators. Our study investigated 1) how tillage type and cover crop use affected slug and slug predators, 2) if certain farming practices and field characteristics can be used to predict slug injury, and 3) if slugs preferred feeding on commonly-used cover crop species when offered with maize or soybean seedlings. Commercial production fields with different combinations of no tillage or reduced tillage, and planted with or without cover crops, were sampled to evaluate how these farming practices affect slugs and slug predators. Shingle traps and frames were used before planting and during early plant growth stages to collect and identify slug species; pitfall traps were used throughout the growing season to collect and identify slug predator species. To determine if slug feeding risk could be predicted, a survey of commercial production fields in the Shenandoah area was conducted and used to identify factors, if any, that influence slug feeding. Laboratory assays were used to determine feeding preference by offering slugs opportunity to feed on leaf tissue from a maize or soybean seedling or a mature cover crop species. We found that tillage type and use of cover crops did not affect the abundance of slugs, but that they did influence predator populations. The highest number of total predators were found in fields with reduced tillage, cover crops, and no insecticide use prior to crop emergence. Harvestmen were potentially the most impactful slug predator in the region. Field surveys suggested that no tested factor or interaction of factors affected slug injury to plants in commercial fields. Finally, we observed that slugs fed differently on soybean and maize tissue depending on cover crop species present.
Chapman, Paul. "Short-term effects of vegetation management on epigeal predatory arthropods in organic farming systems." Thesis, University of Aberdeen, 1997. http://digitool.abdn.ac.uk/R?func=search-advanced-go&find_code1=WSN&request1=AAIU094109.
Full textÖstman, Örjan. "Landscape and farm management influence generalist predators : effects on condition, abundance, and biological control /." Uppsala : Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, 2002. http://diss-epsilon.slu.se/archive/00000207/.
Full textThesis documentation sheet inserted. Appendix reprints five published papers and manuscripts, three co-authored with others. Includes bibliographical references. Also available electronically via World Wide Web in PDF format; online version lacks appendix.
Sutherland, Jamie Phillip. "Resource assessment and utilisation by aphidophagous syrphids, and its implications for integrated pest management." Thesis, Manchester Metropolitan University, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.389530.
Full textAmeerbakhsh, Omair. "Towards the use of interactive simulation for effective e-learning in university classroom environment." Thesis, University of Stirling, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1893/27939.
Full textParker, Denisha M. "Drivers of Predatory Insect Distribution in Urban Greenspaces." The Ohio State University, 2021. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1619126809030714.
Full textSingh, Sally R. "The behaviour of the ladybird, Coccinella septempunctata, in response to sub-lethal doses of insecticide." Thesis, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.341761.
Full textKross, Sara Mae. "The efficacy of reintroducing the New Zealand falcon into the vineyards of Marlborough for pest control and falcon conservation." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Biological Sciences, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6726.
Full textAtanackovic, Valentina. "Understanding constraints and potentials of weed management through seed predation by harvester ants." Doctoral thesis, Universitat de Lleida, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10803/112029.
Full textLa variabilidad de la depredación de semillas en el tiempo y espacio ofrecen oportunidades a las malas hierbas para escapar de los depredadores. Los niveles de depredación en cereales de secano fueron entre los más altos registrados jamás en cultivos extensivos (46-100%). El momento de producción de semillas de las malas hierbas se superponía con el período de mayor demanda. La distribución espacial de los nidos era no aleatoria. Los nidos grandes estaban más regularmente distribuidos, los nidos pequeños más agrupados. Las hormigas respondieron con tasas de depredación extremadamente elevadas (99-100%) a todas las densidades de semillas aplicadas (1.000 a 20.000 semillas m-2), con respuesta denso-independiente. El tamaño de parche influyó en las tasas de depredación por hormigas. Fue mayor en los parches más grandes (99-100%) y menor en los más pequeños (78-94%). Esta investigación cuantificó la variabilidad espacio-temporal de la depredación de semillas en cereales de secano y la eficacia.
The variability of seed predation in time and space may provide opportunities to weeds to escape predation. Seed predation rates by harvester ants in dryland cereals were among the highest ever recorded on arable fields (46-100%). The timing of weed seed shed overlapped with the period of highest demand. The spatial nest arrangement appeared to be non-random. The large nests were more or less regularly distributed, small nests tended to be more clumped. Harvester ants responded with extremely high predation rates (99-100 %) to all densities of Lolium multiflorum L. seeds applied (1000-20000 seeds m-2), and the response was density independent. Patch size influenced predation rates by harvester ants. Estimated seed predation rate was highest in the largest patches (99-100%), and lowest in the smallest patches (78-94 %). The current research quantified temporal and spatial variability in seed predation in dryland cereals and the influence to the efficacy of granivory.
Harrison, Scott. "Cougar predation on bighorn sheep in the junction wildlife management area, British Columbia." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29870.
Full textScience, Faculty of
Zoology, Department of
Graduate
Mitchell, Dustin L. "Cougar Predation Behavior in North-Central Utah." DigitalCommons@USU, 2013. http://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/1539.
Full textVerwilghen, Aude. "Rodent pest management and predators communities in oil palm plantations in Indonesia : comparison of two contrasted system." Thesis, Besançon, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015BESA2042/document.
Full textRodent pest control is often a major issue in agroecosystems. We conducted a 3-year comparative study (2010-2012) in oil palm plantations in Riau and Bangka provinces, in Indonesia: in both areas barn owls have been introduced for rat control, and were at least as abundant in Bangka plantations than in Riau, but in Riau rat populations have been maintained at an acceptable level without the use of rodenticide, whereas in Bangka intensive rodenticide applications did not prevent high levels of rat damage. We compared these two contrasting systems in terms of predator community (barn owls and small carnivores) abundance and/or diet. We found that small carnivores were much more abundant in Riau plantations than in Bangka, and that the leopard cat (Prionailurus bengalensis) was the dominant species in Riau while absent from Bangka. Our results on diet suggested that rat prey intake from barn owls and from the small carnivore community would be less in Bangka plantations than in Riau. Broadly, our results suggest that small carnivores, notably the leopard cat, play an important role in rodent control. In addition, we investigated spatial distribution of small carnivores within the oil palm habitat. Our results support the hypothesis that, although the oil palm may be habitable for some small carnivore species such as the leopard cat, where they supposedly forage at night, most species still need forest for their survival in oil palm landscapes. Oil palm plantations managers should adapt agricultural practices and land-use to enhance small carnivores, with the view to improve rodent control
Dunn, Jenny Claire. "Farming and foraging : indirect effects of management on bird biology through changing distributions of food and predators." Thesis, University of Leeds, 2009. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/15218/.
Full textvan, der Walt Johannes Adriaan. "Black bass (Micropterus spp.) in the Olifants- Doorn River system: distribution, distribution barries, predatory impact and management." Thesis, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11838/856.
Full textIn the Cape Floristic Region the Olifants- Doorn River (ODR) system is a known biodiversity hotspot in terms of endemic freshwater fish. Eight of the 10 described native freshwater fish species are endemic to this river system. One of the main threats to these fish is predation by introduced predatory fishes. Three species of alien invasive black bass (Micropterus salmoides, Micropterus dolomieu and Micropterus punctulatus) were introduced into the ODR system during the 1930s but prior to this study, their distribution and impacts had never been quantified on a system-wide basis. This study aimed to clarify the current distribution, distribution barriers, predatory impact and best management options for black bass in the ODR system. This was achieved by conducting a system-wide survey of 578 km of stream covering 41 tributaries in the ODR system. Black bass presence was tracked upstream within each tributary to its uppermost distribution point where physical barriers preventing further spread were identified and described. Fish species composition, abundance and size were recorded directly above and below these barriers to quantify black bass impact on the native fish. This research demonstrated that since introduction, natural and human assisted dispersal has facilitated not only the establishment of black bass in the Olifants and Doring main streams but also facilitated the invasions into 22 tributaries. Based on survey results it was estimated that 81.5 % of the ODR system that was previously occupied by native cyprinids is now invaded by black bass. Assessments of native fish abundance and size distribution above and below black bass invasion barriers demonstrated that in invaded tributaries only adults of larger cyprinids (Labeo seeberi, Labeobarbus capensis and Barbus serra) were able to co-occur with black bass species. Smaller fish such as juvenile L. seeberi, L. capensis and B. serra and native minnows (Barbus calidus, Pseudobarbus phlegethon and Barbus anoplus) were absent from the black bass invaded reaches. The findings of this catchment scale study are consistent with findings from other studies in the region. As a result, most native fishes are now restricted to streams above the natural barriers that limit the upstream invasions of black bass. Black bass eradication from invaded reaches is therefore necessary for habitat restoration. Effective eradication will however depend on the presence of barriers to prevent re-invasion from downstream sources. To better understand what constitutes the nature of such barriers, this study characterised the natural barriers that inhibited black bass invasions in 17 tributaries. Natural barriers comprised of 15 waterfalls, two cascades and one chute ranging in height from 0.49 m to 3.5 m with an average vertical drop of 1.21 ± 0.67 m. These findings suggest that black bass have poor jumping abilities and the recommended height of artificial barriers as part of a black bass management program should be between 80 and 100 cm depending on the size of the tributary. As a result, the presence of natural barriers or the construction of artificial barriers to prevent black bass invasions is considered a vital component of native fish conservation projects. Finally, the study assessed the feasibility of black bass eradication from the 22 invaded tributaries in the ODR system based on eight criterion covering aspects of biological, physical, anthropogenic and logistical importance. This assessment showed that effective eradication was most likely only feasible in seven tributaries. Prioritisation of these seven tributaries for black bass eradication based on the threatened status of the resident native species, the land-use in the respective catchments and the tributary length available for rehabilitation indicate that the Breekkrans, Biedouw and Thee Rivers should receive the highest priority.