11 research outputs found

    Chapter 19 Noise pollution and its impact on human health and the environment

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    This chapter deals with (1) the basic theory of sound propagation; (2) an overview of noise pollution problem in view of policy and standards by the World Health Organization, the United States, and the European Union; (3) noise exposure sources from aircraft, road traffic and railways, in-vehicle, work, and construction sites, and occupations, and households; (4) the noise pollution impact on human health and the biological environment; (5) modeling of regional noise-affected habitats in protected and unprotected land areas and the marine environment; (6) noise control measures and sustainability in view of sustainable building design, noise mapping, and control measures such as barriers and berms along roadsides, acoustic building materials, roadway vehicle noise source control, road surface, and pavement materials; and (7) environmental noise pollution management measures and their impact on human health

    Communal strategies for social protest and change: communes as indirect challenges to systems of authority during the Civil rights movement

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    Social movements and communes have, thus far, been studied in isolation; however, they are connected via social movement tactics and confrontations with the state. Communalism as a social movement is also explored. Do communes fill strategic purposes within a social movement’s struggle? Communes influence society, making them innately political and strategic. A challenge to the dominant social structure and government, communes are viewed as internally focused without relation to the social and political systems that surround them. Sometimes seen as halfway houses, communes can act as safe spaces and incubators for strategy, organization building, and vision. Prefigurative politics also plays a role when it comes to social movements and communes. The author’s methodology is a literature review on social movements and communes

    BHCO_Brooks for Dryad

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    Brown-headed cowbird relative abundance and brood parasitism data collected at mixed-grass prairie and conventional oil and natural gas infrastructure lease sites near Brooks, Alberta, Canada, 2013-2014

    Data from: Conventional oil and natural gas infrastructure increases brown-headed cowbird (Molothrus ater) relative abundance and parasitism in mixed-grass prairie

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    The rapid expansion of oil and natural gas development across the Northern Great Plains has contributed to habitat fragmentation, which may facilitate brood parasitism of ground-nesting grassland songbird nests by brown-headed cowbirds (Molothrus ater), an obligate brood parasite, through the introduction of perches and anthropogenic edges. We tested this hypothesis by measuring brown-headed cowbird relative abundance and brood parasitism rates of Savannah sparrow (Passerculus sandwichensis) nests in relation to the presence of infrastructure features and proximity to potential perches and edge habitat. The presence of oil and natural gas infrastructure increased brown-headed cowbird relative abundance by a magnitude of four times, which resulted in four times greater brood parasitism rates at infrastructure sites. While the presence of infrastructure and the proximity to roads were influential in predicting brood parasitism rates, the proximity of perch sites was not. This suggests that brood parasitism associated with oil and natural gas infrastructure may result in additional pressures that reduce productivity of this declining grassland songbird

    Microclimate complexity in temperate grasslands: implications for conservation and management under climate change

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    As climate change advances, there is a need to examine climate conditions at scales that are ecologically relevant to species. While microclimates in forested systems have been extensively studied, microclimates in grasslands have received little attention despite the climate vulnerability of this endangered biome. We employed a novel combination of iButton temperature and humidity measurements, fine-scale spatial observations of vegetation and topography collected by unpiloted aircraft system, and gridded mesoclimate products to model microclimate anomalies in temperate grasslands. We found that grasslands harbored diverse microclimates and that primary productivity (as represented by normalized difference vegetation index), canopy height, and topography were strong spatial drivers of these anomalies. Microclimate heterogeneity is likely of ecological importance to grassland organisms seeking out climate change refugia, and thus there is a need to consider microclimate complexity in the management and conservation of grassland biodiversity

    Quantifying multiple breeding vital rates in two declining grassland songbirds

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    Many studies of reproductive success in North American songbirds have focused on nesting success, while relatively few have evaluated breeding-season adult survival and post-fledging survival. Grassland songbirds are among North America's most rapidly declining avian groups, and knowledge of factors that influence vital rates is needed to address declines, develop management strategies, and accurately model population limitation. We concurrently monitored nesting success, breeding-season adult survival, and post-fledging survival of two grassland obligates, Baird's Sparrow and Grasshopper sparrow, breeding in western North Dakota and northeastern Montana. Nesting success was monitored by locating and visiting nests at regular intervals while adult and post-fledging survival were assessed by daily telemetry tracking of radio-tagged birds. We analyzed the three variables using logistic exposure and modeled climate, temporal, and vegetative covariates to explain variation in rates. Cumulative nesting success, breeding-season adult survival, and post-fledging survival were 37%, 78%, and 25%, respectively, for Baird's Sparrow and 16%, 74%, and 55% for Grasshopper Sparrow. Both nesting success and post-fledging survival in Baird's Sparrow were responsive to environmental covariates including temporal effects and vertical vegetation structure. Conversely, vital rates of Grasshopper Sparrow were largely unresponsive to covariates we modeled, perhaps because of the species' broader habitat niche relative to Baird's Sparrow. Breeding season adult survival in both species showed little annual variation and was high relative to overwintering survival estimates for the same species, while post-fledging survival in Baird's Sparrow was low and may be a management concern. We suggest as a next step the formal comparison of vital rates across life-stages in an integrated population model capable of identifying sources of population limitation throughout the full annual cycle of the species

    Empirical evidence for multiple costs of begging in poison frog tadpoles

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    In recent decades, theoretical and empirical work has investigated the relative roles of costs and benefits in inhibiting excessive displays of begging to parents. Whether costs are important in maintaining reliability of offspring signals is still debated, in part because empirical evidence for costs is conflicting. Nearly 90% of empirical studies have focused on birds. Costs may differ between birds and other animal groups, but more information is needed about non-avian systems. In this study, we tested for evidence of costs of begging in an anuran, Oophaga pumilio, in which tadpoles vibrate vigorously against mother frogs to solicit nutritive eggs. First, we tested whether a realistic manipulation of begging effort affected tadpole growth over two weeks, and found evidence for such physiological costs. Second, we tested whether the presence of a natural predator would alter begging behavior. Tadpoles begged when hungry, but begged significantly less when both hungry and viewing a spider, suggesting that they have evolved to reduce potential costs of predation risk when begging. Thus, we demonstrate the first example of costs via both physiological expenditure and predation risk in a non-avian species. Unlike most birds which rear offspring in clutches, O. pumilio mothers rear tadpoles in individual sites, suggesting that in the absence of sibling effects, multiple costs of begging work concomitantly to prevent the expression and evolution of excessive or indiscriminate signaling. Future studies of begging from a comparative perspective will continue to augment our understanding of the mechanisms behind the evolution of parent-offspring communication.University of Miami/[]/UM/Estados UnidosAmerican Association of University Women/[]/AAUM/Estados UnidosNational Science Foundation/[OISE-1114218]/NSF/Estados UnidosUCR::VicerrectorĂ­a de Docencia::Ciencias BĂĄsicas::Facultad de Ciencias::Escuela de BiologĂ­
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