1,744 research outputs found
Current and potential distributions of three non-native invasive plants in the contiguous USA
Biological invasions pose a serious threat to biodiversity, but monitoring for invasive species is time consuming and costly. Understanding where species have the potential to invade enables land managers to focus monitoring efforts. In this paper, we compared two simple types of models to predict the potential distributions of three non-native invasive plants (Geranium robertianum, Hedera spp., and Ilex aquifolium) in the contiguous USA. We developed models based on the climatic requirements of the species as reported in the literature (literature-based) and simple climate envelope models based on the climate where the species already occur (observation-based). We then compared the results of these models with the current species distributions. Most models accurately predicted occurrences, but overall accuracy was often low because these species have not yet spread throughout their potential ranges. However, literature-based models for Geranium and observation-based models for Ilex illustrated potential problems with the methodology. Although neither model type produced accurate predictions in all cases, comparing the two methods with each other and with the current species distributions provided rough estimates of the potential habitat for each species. More importantly, this methodology raised specific questions for further research to increase our understanding of invasion patterns of these species. Although these types of models do not replace more rigorous modeling techniques, we suggest that this methodology can be an important early step in understanding the potential distributions of non-native species and can allow managers of natural areas to be aware of potential invaders and implement early detection
Sex differences in the responses to oviposition site cues by a fish revealed by tests with an artificial host
Oviposition decisions can have important fitness consequences for offspring. We investigated the responses of European bitterling, Rhodeus amarus, a freshwater fish that spawns in the gills of living unionid mussels, to oviposition site cues. Using an artificial mussel, we manipulated the flow velocity, dissolved oxygen concentration and odour cues of mussels presented to pairs of R. amarus. Females responded positively to mussel odour and to dissolved oxygen cues. Male response was dependent on mussel odour and the flow velocity of water emerging from the artificial mussel. These responses are potentially adaptive, with females responding to cues that indicate the quality of oviposition sites for incubation of eggs. Males responded to cues with implications for optimal sperm allocation
A strong redshift dependence of the broad absorption line quasar fraction
We describe the application of non-negative matrix factorisation to generate
compact reconstructions of quasar spectra from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
(SDSS), with particular reference to broad absorption line quasars (BALQSOs).
BAL properties are measured for SiIV lambda1400, CIV lambda1550, AlIII
lambda1860 and MgII lambda2800, resulting in a catalogue of 3547 BALQSOs. Two
corrections, based on extensive testing of synthetic BALQSO spectra, are
applied in order to estimate the intrinsic fraction of CIV BALQSOs. First, the
probability of an observed BALQSO spectrum being identified as such by our
algorithm is calculated as a function of redshift, signal-to-noise ratio and
BAL properties. Second, the different completenesses of the SDSS target
selection algorithm for BALQSOs and non-BAL quasars are quantified. Accounting
for these selection effects the intrinsic CIV BALQSO fraction is 41+/-5 per
cent. Our analysis of the selection effects allows us to measure the dependence
of the intrinsic CIV BALQSO fraction on luminosity and redshift. We find a
factor of 3.5+/-0.4 decrease in the intrinsic fraction from the highest
redshifts, z~4.0, down to z~2.0. The redshift dependence implies that an
orientation effect alone is not sufficient to explain the presence of BAL
troughs in some but not all quasar spectra. Our results are consistent with the
intrinsic BALQSO fraction having no strong luminosity dependence, although with
3-sigma limits on the rate of change of the intrinsic fraction with luminosity
of -6.9 and 7.0 per cent dex^-1 we are unable to rule out such a dependence.Comment: MNRAS in press; 28 pages, 28 figures; full data table is available
until Sep 2011 at www.ast.cam.ac.uk/~jta/papers/bal_nmf_table1.da
The Evolution of Quasar CIV and SiIV Broad Absorption Lines Over Multi-Year Time Scales
We investigate the variability of CIV 1549A broad absorption line (BAL)
troughs over rest-frame time scales of up to ~7 yr in 14 quasars at redshifts
z>2.1. For 9 sources at sufficiently high redshift, we also compare CIV and
SiIV 1400A absorption variation. We compare shorter- and longer-term
variability using spectra from up to four different epochs per source and find
complex patterns of variation in the sample overall. The scatter in the change
of absorption equivalent width (EW), Delta EW, increases with the time between
observations. BALs do not, in general, strengthen or weaken monotonically, and
variation observed over shorter (<months) time scales is not predictive of
multi-year variation. We find no evidence for asymmetry in the distribution of
Delta EW that would indicate that BALs form and decay on different time scales,
and we constrain the typical BAL lifetime to be >~30 yr. The BAL absorption for
one source, LBQS 0022+0150, has weakened and may now be classified as a
mini-BAL. Another source, 1235+1453, shows evidence of variable, blue continuum
emission that is relatively unabsorbed by the BAL outflow. CIV and SiIV BAL
shape changes are related in at least some sources. Given their high
velocities, BAL outflows apparently traverse large spatial regions and may
interact with parsec-scale structures such as an obscuring torus. Assuming BAL
outflows are launched from a rotating accretion disk, notable azimuthal
symmetry is required in the outflow to explain the relatively small changes
observed in velocity structure over times up to 7 yr
Radio spectra and polarisation properties of radio-loud Broad Absorption Line Quasars
We present multi-frequency observations of a sample of 15 radio-emitting
Broad Absorption Line Quasars (BAL QSOs), covering a spectral range between 74
MHz and 43 GHz. They display mostly convex radio spectra which typically peak
at about 1-5 GHz (in the observer's rest-frame), flatten at MHz frequencies,
probably due to synchrotron self-absorption, and become steeper at high
frequencies, i.e., >~ 20 GHz. VLA 22-GHz maps (HPBW ~ 80 mas) show unresolved
or very compact sources, with linear projected sizes of <= 1 kpc. About 2/3 of
the sample look unpolarised or weakly polarised at 8.4 GHz, frequency in which
reasonable upper limits could be obtained for polarised intensity. Statistical
comparisons have been made between the spectral index distributions of samples
of BAL and non-BAL QSOs, both in the observed and the rest-frame, finding
steeper spectra among non-BAL QSOs. However constraining this comparison to
compact sources results in no significant differences between both
distributions. This comparison is consistent with BAL QSOs not being oriented
along a particular line of sight. In addition, our analysis of the spectral
shape, variability and polarisation properties shows that radio BAL QSOs share
several properties common to young radio sources like Compact Steep Spectrum
(CSS) or Gigahertz-Peaked Spectrum (GPS) sources.Comment: 18 pages, 11 Postscript figures, 12 Tables. Accepted for publication
in MNRA
Changing patterns of growth in a changing planet: how a shift in phenology affects critical life‐history traits in annual fishes
1. Changes to the timing of key life‐cycle events can alter selection on life‐history traits and have the potential to drive a cascade of effects at the community level. We investigated how the growth rate and sexual maturation of two annual killifish species (Austrolebias bellottii and Austrolebias nigripinnis) were altered by a change in the pattern of precipitation. These are annual species, endemic to ephemeral pools, persist in desiccated sediment as partly developed embryos.
2. We sampled 18 pools supporting populations of both species in a Pampa region adjacent to the Rio Negro in western Uruguay throughout the austral winter of 2015. Fish growth and maturation were monitored from pool inundation to habitat desiccation, along with environmental variables.
3. The region experienced an unprecedented mid‐winter desiccation of pools that usually contain water from autumn to late spring, typically only desiccating in summer. Many desiccated pools were re‐inundated from later rains, generating a second cohort of killifish in some pools (53%) in response to atypical conditions.
4. The second cohort developed more rapidly than the first, with 40% earlier attainment of asymptotic body size. Rapid development of second‐cohort fish was associated with earlier maturation and greater investment in reproductive tissue.
5. The study demonstrated the capacity of annual fish to express developmental plasticity that buffered the negative consequences of an atypical seasonal climatic cycle. The capacity of these annual fishes to cope with alternations to their life cycle will depend on the ability of egg banks in the sediment to tolerate an increased unpredictability of precipitation.
6. Overall, we demonstrate how phenotypic plasticity can mitigate the negative impacts of climate change and associated altered phenology
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