60 research outputs found
The ecology of the European badger (Meles meles) in Ireland: a review
peer-reviewedThe badger is an ecologically and economically important species. Detailed knowledge of aspects of the ecology of this animal in Ireland has only emerged through research over recent decades. Here, we review what is known about the species' Irish populations and compare these findings with populations in Britain and Europe. Like populations elsewhere, setts are preferentially constructed on south or southeast facing sloping ground in well-drained soil types. Unlike in Britain, Irish badger main setts are less complex and most commonly found in hedgerows. Badgers utilise many habitat types, but greater badger densities have been associated with landscapes with high proportions of pasture and broadleaf woodlands. Badgers in Ireland tend to have seasonally varied diets, with less dependence on earthworms than some other populations in northwest Europe. Recent research suggests that females exhibit later onset and timing of reproductive events, smaller litter sizes and lower loss of blastocysts than populations studied in Britain. Adult social groups in Ireland tend to be smaller than in Britain, though significantly larger than social groups from continental Europe. Although progress has been made in estimating the distribution and density of badger populations, national population estimates have varied widely in the Republic of Ireland. Future research should concentrate on filling gaps in our knowledge, including population models and predictive spatial modelling that will contribute to vaccine delivery, management and conservation strategies.Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and FoodTeagasc Walsh Fellowship Programm
Paleo-Yardangs -- Wind-Scoured Desert Landforms at the Permo-Triassic Unconformity
In Canyonlands National Park, south-east Utah, at least 29 partly exhumed, aligned sandstone ridges trending generally N20-degrees-W occur at the upper unconformable surface of the Lower Permian (Leonardian) White Rim Sandstone. The ridges are at least 1.5 km long, 250 m wide and have up to 14 m of vertical relief (mean of 9 m). A thin lag of coarse sandstone that contains wind-ripple laminae and granule ripples directly overlies the ridges. Angular blocks of sandstone within the lag and sand-filled fissures immediately below the lag, within the ridges, attest to early cementation of the ridge-forming material. SE-dipping aeolian cross-strata within the White Rim Sandstone and within the lag closely parallel the ridge trend. The ridges are interpreted as wind-sculpted desert landforms (yardangs) that developed on the lithified upper surface of the White Rim Sandstone during an extended period of hyperaridity towards the end of the Permian
The productivity and response to inorganic fertilizers of species- rich wetland hay meadows on the Somerset Moors: nitrogen response under hay cutting and aftermath grazing
The productivity and response to fertilizer nitrogen (N) was measured in herb-rich wetland hay meadows within a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) in Somerset, UK. Output from hay cut after 1 July each year and from beef production at aftermath grazing was measured over a total of 4 years. Total utilized metabolizable energy (UME) output averaged from 40.6 GJ ha-1 year-1 without fertilizers to 61.7 GJ ha-1 at 200 kg N ha-1 (N-200), the highest rate used, with about two-thirds of this output from hay. N response was markedly curvilinear above about 50 kg N ha-1, but data from a concurrent experiment suggested that the comparatively low replacement rates of P and K applied were limiting at higher N rates. When hay cutting was delayed until early August in a wet year, yield response to N was lost because fertilized swards had passed a peak in yield several weeks before harvest. Compared with other published data, the results suggest that output and response to N is not constrained by the diversity of the flora or the damp conditions. The data will help to estimate the financial implications for farmers of restricted or zero fertilizer use within SSSIs and the wider Environmentally Sensitive Areas
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