144 research outputs found

    Invasions des corridors fluviaux du Sud-Ouest par des espèces végétales exotiques

    Full text link
    L'étude de 245 sites répartis le long de huit rivières du Sud-Ouest de la France, depuis leur source jusqu'à leur embouchure, a permis d'identifier 420 espèces végétales exotiques au sein du corridor riverain, la rivière la plus colonisée étant l'Adour. Ces plantes présentent une vaste palette d'attributs biogéographiques, historiques, morphologiques, biologiques et écologiques. Dans leur grande majorité, elles ne sont pas particulièrement spécialisées vis-à-vis des conditions riveraines. La structure du corridor, le fonctionnement hydrologique, le degré d'anthropisation et le climat contrôlent l'arrivée et le maintien des espèces exotiques dans les zones riveraines des rivières. Etudié sur 32 sites de l'Adour, le pourcentage en espèces exotiques (par rapport à la richesse totale en espèces) n'est pas constant d'une station à l'autre. Il évolue selon les gradients environnementaux qui participent à la sectorisation fonctionnelle du fleuve. Ce pourcentage en exotiques reflète la sensibilité des systèmes riverains aux invasions et peut être utilisé comme un marqueur du dysfonctionnement de ces systèmes

    Distributive Justice and the Crime Drop

    Get PDF
    Data were extracted from a total of almost 600000 respondents from all sweeps of the Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) 1982-2012 to determine whether victimisation was more or less concentrated across households during the crime drop. The most victimised household decile experienced the greatest absolute decline in victimisation but still accounted for over 70% of all victimisations suffered. Methodological issues underlying the patterns observed are discussed. The characteristics associated with highly victimised household are consistent across survey sweeps. Cross-national and crime type extension of work of the kind undertaken is advocated as both intrinsically important and likely to clarify the dynamics of the crime drop

    The impact of greeting personalization on prevalence estimates in a survey of sexual assault victimization

    Get PDF
    Although personalized invitations tend to increase response rates in web surveys, little is known about how personalization impacts data quality. To evaluate the impact of personalization on survey estimates of sensitive items, the effects of personalized and generic greetings in a survey (n = 9,673) on an extremely sensitive topic-sexual assault victimization-were experimentally compared. Personalization was found to have increased response rates with negligible impact on victimization reporting, and this impact was similar across most demographic groups. The findings suggest that future studies may benefit from the use of a personalized greeting when recruiting sample members to participate in a sensitive survey, but that further research is necessary to better understand how the impact of personalization on reporting may differ across some demographic groups

    Light interception principally drives the understory response to boxelder invasion in riparian forests

    Get PDF
    Since several decades, American boxelder (Acer negundo) is replacing white willow (Salix alba) riparian forests along southern European rivers. This study aims to evaluate the consequences of boxelder invasion on understory community in riparian areas. We determined the understory species richness, composition and biomass in boxelder and white willow stands located in three riparian forests, representative of three rivers with distinct hydrological regimes. We investigated correlation of these variables to soil moisture and particle size, main soil nutrient stocks, potential nitrification and denitrification, tree canopy cover and photosynthetic active radiation (PAR) at the ground level. A greenhouse experiment was then conducted to identify the causal factors responsible for changes in the understory. The effect of soil type, PAR level and water level on the growth and the biomass production of Urtica dioica were examined. A lower plant species richness and biomass, and a modification of community composition were observed for boxelder understory in all sites, regardless of their environmental characteristics. The strongest modification that follows boxelder invasion was the decline in U. dioica, the dominant species of the white willow forest understory. These differences were mainly correlated with a lower incident PAR under boxelder canopy. The greenhouse experiment identified PAR level as the main factor responsible for the changes in U. dioica stem number and biomass. Our results indicate that adult boxelder acts as an ecosystem engineer that decreases light availability. The opportunistic invasion by boxelder leads to important understory changes, which could alter riparian ecosystem functioning

    Naturalised Vitis Rootstocks in Europe and Consequences to Native Wild Grapevine

    Get PDF
    The genus Vitis is represented by several coexisting species in Europe. Our study focuses on naturalised rootstocks that originate in viticulture. The consequences of their presence to the landscape and to native European species (Vitis vinifera ssp. silvestris) are evaluated. This study compares ecological traits (seven qualitative and quantitative descriptors) and the genetic diversity (10 SSR markers) of populations of naturalised rootstocks and native wild grapevines. 18 large naturalised rootstock populations were studied in the RhĂ´ne watershed. Wild European grapevines are present in four main habitats (screes, alluvial forests, hedges, and streamside hedges). In contrast, naturalised rootstock populations are mainly located in alluvial forests, but they clearly take advantage of alluvial system dynamics and connectivity at the landscape level. These latter populations appear to reproduce sexually, and show a higher genetic diversity than Vitis vinifera ssp. silvestris. The regrouping of naturalised rootstocks in interconnected populations tends to create active hybrid swarms of rootstocks. The rootstocks show characters of invasive plants. The spread of naturalised rootstocks in the environment, the acceleration of the decline of the European wild grapevine, and the propagation of genes of viticultural interest in natural populations are potential consequences that should be kept in mind when undertaking appropriate management measures

    Patterns of ash (Fraxinus excelsior L.) colonization in mountain grasslands: the importance of management practices

    Get PDF
    International audienceWoody colonization of grasslands is often associated with changes in abiotic or biotic conditions or a combination of both. Widely used as fodder and litter in the past traditional agro-pastoral system, ash (Fraxinus excelsior L.) has now become a colonizing species of mountain grasslands in the French Pyrenees. Its present distribution is dependent on past human activities and it is locally controlled by propagule pressure and abiotic conditions. However, even when all favourable conditions are met, all the potentially colonizable grasslands are not invaded. We hypothesize that management practices should play a crucial role in the control of ash colonization. From empirical field surveys we have compared the botanical composition of a set of grasslands (present and former) differing in management practices and level of ash colonization. We have displayed a kind of successional gradient positively linked to both ash cover and height but not to the age of trees. We have tested the relationships between ash presence in grassland and management types i.e. cutting and/or grazing, management intensity and some grassland communities' features i.e. total and local specific richness and species heterogeneity. Mixed use (cutting and grazing) is negatively linked to ash presence in grassland whereas grazing alone positively. Mixed use and high grazing intensity are directly preventing ash seedlings establishment, when low grazing intensity is allowing ash seedlings establishment indirectly through herbaceous vegetation neglected by livestock. Our results show the existence of a limit between grasslands with and without established ashes corresponding to a threshold in the intensity of use. Under this threshold, when ash is established, the colonization process seems to become irreversible. Ash possesses the ability of compensatory growth and therefore under a high grazing intensity develops a subterranean vegetative reproduction. However the question remains at which stage of seedling development and grazing intensity these strategies could occur

    Invasions des corridors fluviaux du Sud-Ouest par des espèces végétales exotiques

    No full text
    L'étude de 245 sites répartis le long de huit rivières du Sud-Ouest de la France, depuis leur source jusqu'à leur embouchure, a permis d'identifier 420 espèces végétales exotiques au sein du corridor riverain, la rivière la plus colonisée étant l'Adour. Ces plantes présentent une vaste palette d'attributs biogéographiques, historiques, morphologiques, biologiques et écologiques. Dans leur grande majorité, elles ne sont pas particulièrement spécialisées vis-à-vis des conditions riveraines. La structure du corridor, le fonctionnement hydrologique, le degré d'anthropisation et le climat contrôlent l'arrivée et le maintien des espèces exotiques dans les zones riveraines des rivières. Etudié sur 32 sites de l'Adour, le pourcentage en espèces exotiques (par rapport à la richesse totale en espèces) n'est pas constant d'une station à l'autre. Il évolue selon les gradients environnementaux qui participent à la sectorisation fonctionnelle du fleuve. Ce pourcentage en exotiques reflète la sensibilité des systèmes riverains aux invasions et peut être utilisé comme un marqueur du dysfonctionnement de ces systèmes
    • …
    corecore