1,350 research outputs found
Effects of social disruption in elephants persist decades after culling.
BACKGROUND
Multi-level fission-fusion societies, characteristic of a number of large brained mammal species including some primates, cetaceans and elephants, are among the most complex and cognitively demanding animal social systems. Many free-ranging populations of these highly social mammals already face severe human disturbance, which is set to accelerate with projected anthropogenic environmental change. Despite this, our understanding of how such disruption affects core aspects of social functioning is still very limited.
RESULTS
We now use novel playback experiments to assess decision-making abilities integral to operating successfully within complex societies, and provide the first systematic evidence that fundamental social skills may be significantly impaired by anthropogenic disruption. African elephants (Loxodonta africana) that had experienced separation from family members and translocation during culling operations decades previously performed poorly on systematic tests of their social knowledge, failing to distinguish between callers on the basis of social familiarity. Moreover, elephants from the disrupted population showed no evidence of discriminating between callers when age-related cues simulated individuals on an increasing scale of social dominance, in sharp contrast to the undisturbed population where this core social ability was well developed.
CONCLUSIONS
Key decision-making abilities that are fundamental to living in complex societies could be significantly altered in the long-term through exposure to severely disruptive events (e.g. culling and translocation). There is an assumption that wildlife responds to increasing pressure from human societies only in terms of demography, however our study demonstrates that the effects may be considerably more pervasive. These findings highlight the potential long-term negative consequences of acute social disruption in cognitively advanced species that live in close-knit kin-based societies, and alter our perspective on the health and functioning of populations that have been subjected to anthropogenic disturbance
Cod response to past and current warm phases in the Seas of Iceland, a time series analysis
Climate change, and in particular global warming, is already affecting the Arctic and is expected to continue in the near future. A sustainable use the Arctic resources requires an increased understanding of its functioning that helps us anticipate change and adapt to it. Cod time series in Iceland cover a period of more than 50 years. Three distinct phases can be identified over this span of time: (1) the current warm phase characterised by relatively high cod biomasses, (2) an earlier phase (around the 1950s) with similar conditions separated by (3) some 20 years of cold temperatures and low biomasses. The aim of this study is to identify possible regime-dependent dynamics associated to these warm and cold phases that can help us identify key drivers in the current and future warm regime. To do this we compiled a database of fishing pressure, hydrographical and biological (copepods and euphausiids) variables as well as three cod population descriptors: (i) total spawning stock biomass, (ii) the population growth rate derived from matrix population models and (iii) disaggregated number at age time series. These three cod indices were subsequently regressed (GAM and threshold GAM) against the environmental and anthropogenic variables. Our results point out a probable regime-dependent mechanism where plankton effects would only be important for cod under warm conditions. No threshold-like responses were found in the population growth rate nor in the number at age for the various age classes
Decision-Making for Rewilding: An Adaptive Governance Framework for Social-Ecological Complexity
Rewilding can be defined as the reorganisation or regeneration of wildness in an ecologically degraded landscape with minimal ongoing intervention. While proposals for rewilding are increasingly common, they are frequently controversial and divisive amongst stakeholders. If implemented, rewilding initiatives may alter the social-ecological systems within which they are situated and thus generate sudden and unforeseen outcomes. So far, however, much of the discourse on the planning and implementation of rewilding has focused on identifying and mitigating ecological risks. There has been little consideration of how rewilding could alter the human components of the social-ecological systems concerned, nor governance arrangements that can manage these dynamics. This paper addresses this gap by proposing a generic adaptive governance framework tailored to the characteristics of rewilding, based on principles of managing complex social-ecological systems. We integrate two complementary natural resource governance approaches that lend themselves to the contentious and unpredictable characteristics of rewilding. First, adaptive co-management builds stakeholder adaptive capacity through iterative knowledge generation, collaboration and power-sharing, and cross-scale learning networks. Second, social licence to operate establishes trust and transparency between project proponents and communities through new public-private partnerships. The proposed framework includes structural and process elements which incorporate a boundary organisation, a decision-into-practise social learning exercise for planning and design, and participatory evaluation. The latter assesses rewilding outcomes and pre-conditions for the continuation of adaptive governance and conservation conflict resolution
The first multi-wavelength campaign of AXP 4U 0142+61 from radio to hard X-rays
For the first time a quasi-simultaneous multi-wavelength campaign has been
performed on an Anomalous X-ray Pulsar from the radio to the hard X-ray band.
4U 0142+61 was an INTEGRAL target for 1 Ms in July 2005. During these
observations it was also observed in the X-ray band with Swift and RXTE, in the
optical and NIR with Gemini North and in the radio with the WSRT. In this paper
we present the source-energy distribution. The spectral results obtained in the
individual wave bands do not connect smoothly; apparently components of
different origin contribute to the total spectrum. Remarkable is that the
INTEGRAL hard X-ray spectrum (power-law index 0.79 +/- 0.10) is now measured up
to an energy of ~230 keV with no indication of a spectral break. Extrapolation
of the INTEGRAL power-law spectrum to lower energies passes orders of magnitude
underneath the NIR and optical fluxes, as well as the low ~30 microJy (2 sigma)
upper limit in the radio band.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. To be published in the proceedings of the
conference "Isolated Neutron Stars: from the Interior to the Surface" (April
24-28, 2006, London, UK), eds. S. Zane, R. Turolla and D. Pag
The magnetar emission in the IR band: the role of magnetospheric currents
There is a general consensus about the fact that the magnetar scenario
provides a convincing explanation for several of the observed properties of the
Anomalous X-ray Pulsars and the Soft Gamma Repeaters. However, the origin of
the emission observed at low energies is still an open issue. We present a
quantitative model for the emission in the optical/infrared band produced by
curvature radiation from magnetospheric charges, and compare results with
current magnetars observations.Comment: 6 Pages, 2 Figures. Astrophysics and Space Science, in press.
Proceedings of the ICREA Workshop on The High-Energy Emission from Pulsars
and their Systems, Sant Cugat, April 12-16 201
The variable radio-to-X-ray spectrum of the magnetar XTE J1810-197
We have observed the 5.54s anomalous X-ray pulsar XTE J1810-197 at radio,
millimeter, and infrared (IR) wavelengths, with the aim of learning about its
broad-band spectrum. At the IRAM 30m telescope, we have detected the magnetar
at 88 and 144GHz, the highest radio-frequency emission ever seen from a pulsar.
At 88GHz we detected numerous individual pulses, with typical widths ~2ms and
peak flux densities up to 45Jy. Together with nearly contemporaneous
observations with the Parkes, Nancay, and Green Bank telescopes, we find that
in late 2006 July the spectral index of the pulsar was -0.5<alpha<0 over the
range 1.4-144GHz. Nine dual-frequency Very Large Array and Australia Telescope
Compact Array observations in 2006 May-September are consistent with this
finding, while showing variability of alpha with time. We infer from the IRAM
observations that XTE J1810-197 remains highly linearly polarized at millimeter
wavelengths. Also, toward this pulsar, the transition frequency between strong
and weak scattering in the interstellar medium may be near 50GHz. At Gemini, we
detected the pulsar at 2.2um in 2006 September, at the faintest level yet
observed, K_s=21.89+-0.15. We have also analyzed four archival IR Very Large
Telescope observations (two unpublished), finding that the brightness
fluctuated within a factor of 2-3 over a span of 3 years, unlike the monotonic
decay of the X-ray flux. Thus, there is no correlation between IR and X-ray
flux, and it remains uncertain whether there is any correlation between IR and
radio flux.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; contains improved discussion of
infrared uncertaintie
Recent Progress on Anomalous X-ray Pulsars
I review recent observational progress on Anomalous X-ray Pulsars, with an
emphasis on timing, variability, and spectra. Highlighted results include the
recent timing and flux stabilization of the notoriously unstable AXP 1E
1048.1-5937, the remarkable glitches seen in two AXPs, the newly recognized
variety of AXP variability types, including outbursts, bursts, flares, and
pulse profile changes, as well as recent discoveries regarding AXP spectra,
including their surprising hard X-ray and far-infrared emission, as well as the
pulsed radio emission seen in one source. Much has been learned about these
enigmatic objects over the past few years, with the pace of discoveries
remaining steady. However additional work on both observational and theoretical
fronts is needed before we have a comprehensive understanding of AXPs and their
place in the zoo of manifestations of young neutron stars.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures; to appear in proceedings of the conference
"Isolated Neutron Stars: From the Interior to the Surface" eds. S. Zane, R.
Turolla, D. Page; Astrophysics & Space Science in pres
VLT/NACO observations of the High-Magnetic field radio pulsar PSR J1119-6127
Recent radio observations have unveiled the existence of a number of radio
pulsars with spin-down derived magnetic fields in the magnetar range. However,
their observational properties appears to be more similar to classical radio
pulsars than to magnetars. To shed light on this puzzle we first have to
determine whether the spin-down derived magnetic field values for these radio
pulsars are indeed representative of the actual neutron star magnetic field or
if they are polluted, e.g. by the effects of a torque from a fallback disk. To
investigate this possibility, we have performed deep IR observations of one of
these high magnetic field radio pulsars (PSR J1119-6127) with the ESO VLT to
search for IR emission which can be associated with a disk. No IR emission is
detected from the pulsar position down to J=24, H=23, Ks=22. By comparing our
flux upper limits with the predictions of fallback disk models, we have found
that we can only exclude the presence of a disk with accretion rate dot M
>3x10^16 g/s. This lower limit cannot rule out the presence of a substantial
disk torque on the pulsar, which would then lead to overestimate the value of
the magnetic field inferred from P and dot P.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, A&A, in pres
Quiet but still bright: XMM-Newton observations of the soft gamma-ray repeater SGR 0526-66
SGR 0526-66 was the first soft gamma-ray repeater (SGR) from which a giant
flare was detected in March 1979, suggesting the existence of magnetars, i.e.
neutron stars powered by the decay of their extremely strong magnetic field.
Since then, very little information has been obtained on this object, mainly
because it has been burst-inactive since 1983 and the study of its persistent
X-ray emission has been hampered by its large distance and its location in a
X-ray bright supernova remnant in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Here we report on
a comprehensive analysis of all the available XMM-Newton observations of SGR
0526-66. In particular, thanks to a deep observation taken in 2007, we measured
its pulsation period (P = 8.0544 +/- 0.0002 s) 6 years after its latest
detection by Chandra. This allowed us to detect for the first time a
significant reduction of its spin-down rate. From a comparison with two shorter
XMM-Newton observations performed in 2000 and 2001, we found no significant
changes in the spectrum, which is well modelled by an absorbed power-law with
nH = 4.6E+21 cm^-2 and photon index = 3.27. The high luminosity (about 4E+35
erg/s, in the 1-10 keV energy band) still observed about 25 years after the
latest detection of bursting activity places SGR 0526-66 in the group of bright
and persistent magnetar candidates.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures (1 color) and 2 tables; Accepted for publication
in MNRAS Letter
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