548 research outputs found
The Common Shrew (Sorex araneus): A neglected host of tick-borne infections?
Although the importance of rodents as reservoirs for a number of tick-borne infections is well established,
comparatively little is known about the potential role of shrews, despite them occupying similar habitats. To
address this, blood and tick samples were collected from common shrews (Sorex araneus) and field voles
(Microtus agrestis), a known reservoir of various tick-borne infections, from sites located within a plantation
forest in northern England over a 2-year period. Of 647 blood samples collected from shrews, 121 (18.7%)
showed evidence of infection with Anaplasma phagocytophilum and 196 (30.3%) with Babesia microti. By comparison,
of 1505 blood samples from field voles, 96 (6.4%) were positive for A. phagocytophilum and 458 (30.4%)
for Ba. microti. Both species were infested with the ticks Ixodes ricinus and Ixodes trianguliceps, although they had
different burdens: on average, shrews carried almost six times as many I. trianguliceps larvae, more than twice as
many I. ricinus larvae, and over twice as many nymphs (both tick species combined). The finding that the
nymphs collected from shrews were almost exclusively I. trianguliceps highlights that this species is the key
vector of these infections in this small mammal community. These findings suggest that common shrews are a
reservoir of tick-borne infections and that the role of shrews in the ecology and epidemiology of tick-borne
infections elsewhere needs to be comprehensively investigated
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Unintended consequences: The snowball effect of energy communities
Following the development of decentralized generation and smart appliances, energy communities have become a phenomenon of increased interest. While the benefits of such communities have been discussed, there is increasing concern that inadequate grid tariffs may lead to excess adoption of such business models. Furthermore, snowball effects may be observed following the effects these communities have on grid tariffs. We show that restraining the study to a simple cost-benefit analysis is far from satisfactory. Therefore, we use the framework of cooperative game theory to take account of the ability of communities to share gains between members. The interaction between energy communities and the DSO then results in a non-cooperative equilibrium. We provide mathematical formulations and intuitions of such effects, and carry out realistic numerical applications where communities can invest jointly in solar panels and batteries. We show that such a snowball effect may be observed, but its magnitude and its welfare effects will depend on the grid tariff structure that is implemented, leading to possible PV over-investments
Size-mediated, density-dependent cannibalism in the signal crayfish Pacifastacus leniusculus (Dana, 1852) (Decapoda, Astacidea), an invasive crayfish in Britain
Many thanks to the University of Aberdeen who funded the project and Robert Laughton, director of the Findhorn, Nairn and Lossie Fisheries Trust, who provided useful field work advice and equipment. Thank you to Scottish Natural Heritage for support and facilitating the project with swift licensing (licence no. 22482). We would also like to acknowledge the Peoples Trust for Endangered Species (PTES) for their sponsoring of Connor Wood and for their support of our research. Many thanks also to Ewan McHenry for his assistance with data collection in the field.Peer reviewedPostprin
Are silica defences in grasses driving vole population cycles?
Understanding the factors that drive species population dynamics is fundamental to biology. Cyclic populations of microtine rodents have been the most intensively studied to date, yet there remains great uncertainty over the mechanisms determining the dynamics of most of these populations. For one such population, we present preliminary evidence for a novel mechanism by which herbivore-induced reductions in plant quality alter herbivore life-history parameters and subsequent population growth. We tested the effect of high silica levels on the population growth and individual performance of voles (Microtus agrestis) reared on their winter food plant (Deschampsia caespitosa). In sites where the vole population density was high, silica levels in D. caespitosa leaves collected several months later were also high and vole populations subsequently declined; in sites where the vole densities were low, levels of silica were low and population density increased. High silica levels in their food reduced vole body mass by 0.5% a day. We argue that silica-based defences in grasses may play a key role in driving vole population cycles
Experimental evidence that livestock grazing intensity affects cyclic vole population regulation processes
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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On the viability of energy communities
Following the development of decentralized production technologies, energy communities have become a topic of increased interest. While the potential benefits have been described, we use the framework of cooperative game theory to test the ability of such communities to adequately share the gains. Indeed, despite the potential value created by such coalitions, there is no guarantee that they will be viable: a subset of participants may find it profitable to exit the community and create another one of their own. We take the case of a neighborhood, having access to a limited resource e.g. a shared roof or piece of land which they can exploit if they invest in some renewable production capacity. By joining the community, participants also enjoy aggregation gains in the form of reduced network fees. We find conditions depending on the structure of renewable installation costs, on the magnitude of the aggregation effect and coordination costs and, most importantly, on the chosen sharing rule, under which the whole energy community is stable. Efficiency could require the intervention of a social planner or a change in network tariff structures
Turning back the tide of American mink invasion at unprecedented scales in partnership with communities
Lambin, X., Atkinson, S., Bryce, R., Davies, L., Gray, H., Oliver, M.K, Urquhart, J
Host-parasite biology in the real world: the field voles of Kielder
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Density-dependent increase in superpredation linked to food limitation in a recovering population of northern goshawks, Accipiter gentilis
We are grateful to R. Lourenço and A.K. Mueller for their helpful comments. We thank Forest Research for funding all fieldwork on goshawks during 1973-1996, Forest Enterprise for funding fieldwork after 1998 and T. Dearnley and N. Geddes for allowing and facilitating work in Kielder Forest. This work was also partly funded by a Natural Environment Research Council studentship NE/J500148/1 to SH and a grant NE/F021402/1 to XL and by Natural Research. We thank I. Yoxall and B. Little for the data they collected and their contributions to this study. Lastly, we thank English Nature and the British Trust for Ornithology for kindly issuing licences to monitor goshawk nest sitesPeer reviewedPostprin
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