348 research outputs found

    Spatial and taxonomic biases in bat records: Drivers and conservation implications in a megadiverse country.

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    Biases in data availability have serious consequences on scientific inferences that can be derived. The potential consequences of these biases could be more detrimental in the less-studied megadiverse regions, often characterized by high biodiversity and serious risks of human threats, as conservation and management actions could be misdirected. Here, focusing on 134 bat species in Mexico, we analyze spatial and taxonomic biases and their drivers in occurrence data; and identify priority areas for further data collection which are currently under-sampled or at future environmental risk. We collated a comprehensive database of 26,192 presence-only bat records in Mexico to characterize taxonomic and spatial biases and relate them to species' characteristics (range size and foraging behavior). Next, we examined variables related to accessibility, species richness and security to explain the spatial patterns in occurrence records. Finally, we compared the spatial distributions of existing data and future threats to these species to highlight those regions that are likely to experience an increased level of threats but are currently under-surveyed. We found taxonomic biases, where species with wider geographical ranges and narrow-space foragers (species easily captured with traditional methods), had more occurrence data. There was a significant oversampling toward tropical regions, and the presence and number of records was positively associated with areas of high topographic heterogeneity, road density, urban, and protected areas, and negatively associated with areas which were predicted to have future increases in temperature and precipitation. Sampling efforts for Mexican bats appear to have focused disproportionately on easily captured species, tropical regions, areas of high species richness and security; leading to under-sampling in areas of high future threats. These biases could substantially influence the assessment of current status of, and future anthropogenic impacts on, this diverse species group in a tropical megadiverse country

    Individual and demographic consequences of reduced body condition following repeated exposure to high temperatures

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    Although the lethal consequences of extreme heat are increasingly reported in the literature, the fitness costs of exposure to sublethal high air temperatures, typically identified in the 30–40°C range, are poorly understood. We examine the effect of high (≥35°C) daily maxima on body condition of a semiarid population of White-plumed Honeyeaters, Ptilotula penicillatus, monitored between 1986 and 2012. During this 26-yr period, temperature has risen, on average, by 0.06°C each year at the site, the frequency of days with thermal maxima ≥35°C has increased and rainfall has declined. Exposure to high temperatures affected body condition of White-plumed Honeyeaters, but only in low-rainfall conditions. There was no effect of a single day of exposure to temperatures ≥35°C but repeated exposure was associated with reduced body condition: 3.0% reduction in body mass per day of exposure. Rainfall in the previous 30 d ameliorated these effects, with reduced condition evident only in dry conditions. Heat-exposed males with reduced body condition were less likely to be recaptured at the start of the following spring; they presumably died. Heat-exposed females, regardless of body condition, showed lower survival than exposed males, possibly due to their smaller body mass. The higher mortality of females and smaller males exposed to temperatures ≥35°C may have contributed to the increase in mean body size of this population over 23 years. Annual survival declined across time concomitant with increasing frequency of days ≥35°C and decreasing rainfall. Our study is one of few to identify a proximate cause of climate change related mortality, and associated long-term demographic consequence. Our results have broad implications for avian communities living in arid and semiarid regions of Australia, and other mid-latitudes regions where daily maximum temperatures already approach physiological limits in regions affected by both decreased precipitation and warming

    Collect, connect, upscale : towards coordinated monitoring of migratory shorebirds in the asia-pacific

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    Monitoring migratory species can be extremely challenging. For example, millions of migratory shorebirds migrate from breeding grounds in northern China, Mongolia and Russia to East Asia and Australasia each year, traversing more than 20 countries while on migration. Studies within individual nations have identified rapid declines in many species, yet progress toward a fully unified scheme for continuous tracking of population change at the scale of the entire East Asian-Australasian Flyway has been slow. To reflect on lessons learned and consider how further progress might be made, we review some of the factors that have limited the full emergence of shorebird monitoring in the East Asian- Australasian Flyway, including fragmentation among multiple databases, low data readiness, inadequate metadata and gaps in survey coverage. We conclude that while technical solutions for many of these issues do exist, the biggest challenge is to navigate the significant organisational, socio-cultural and resourcing contexts of those people doing the monitoring. Technical solutions alone will not create a cohesive network of people whose local efforts are pooled to create robust flyway-scale monitoring. © 2021 Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales. All rights reserved. *Please note that there are multiple authors for this article therefore only the name of the first 5 including Federation University Australia affiliate “Birgita Hansen” is provided in this record*

    Does governance play a role in the distribution of invasive alien species?

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    Invasive alien species (IAS) constitute a major threat to global biological diversity. In order to control their spread, a detailed understanding of the factors influencing their distribution is essential. Although international trade is regarded as a major force structuring spatial patterns of IAS, the role of other social factors remains unclear. Despite studies highlighting the importance of strong governance in slowing drivers of biodiversity loss such as logging, deforestation, and agricultural intensification, no study has yet analyzed its contribution to the issue of IAS. Using estimates of governance quality and comprehensive spatiotemporal IAS data, we performed multiple linear regressions to investigate the effect of governance quality upon the distribution of species listed under "100 of the worst" IAS in 38 Eurasian countries as defined by DASIE. Our model suggested that for countries with higher GDP, stronger governance was associated with a greater number of the worst IAS; in contrast, for the lowest GDP countries under analysis, stronger governance was associated with fewer of these IAS. We elucidate how the quality of governance within a country has implications for trade, tourism, transport, legislation, and economic development, all of which influence the spread of IAS. While our findings support the common assumption that strengthening governance benefits conservation interventions in countries of smaller economy, we find that this effect is not universal. Stronger governance alone cannot adequately address the problem of IAS, and targeted action is required in relatively high-GDP countries in order to stem the influx of IAS associated with high volumes of trade

    教室外での英語学習を支援するための広島大学英語Can-Doリストの拡充

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    本論文は,広島大学外国語教育研究センターが開発した広島大学英語Can-Do リストについて,有効性を高めるために実施した再調査とその結果を報告する。本リストは,学生による目標設定と自主学習の支援ツールとして広島大学の英語教育に貢献することを目指して開発が開始され,その後もデータ収集を継続していた。前回発表されたリストは単年のデータのみに基づくものであったが,このリストの期待される役割の大きさを考えると,複数年のデータ収集による追加の検討が必要である。そこで,2016年から2019年にかけて新たに収集したデータで再調査を行った。しかし,残念ながら,この再調査ですべての問題点を解消することはできなかったため,今後もリストの修正を継続すべきであると考える。今後,検討すべき点を二つ指摘する。一つは,分析する得点帯の範囲である。今回の調査では,TOEIC® Listening & Reading IP テストのスコア800点以上および295点以下に該当する学生が少なく,分析から除外した。これらの得点帯に該当する学生は少ないと判断し,このまま除外とするのか,それとも,得点帯の拡大を目指すのか,今後さらに検討する必要がある。もう一つは,前回調査と同様にIIBC が開発した既存のリストを用いてCan-Do 分析を行ったことである。次回以降の調査では,リストにCan-Do ステイトメントの追加や削除を施し,精緻化や修正が必要である。We report on a re-survey of the Hiroshima University English Can-Do List, developed by the Institute for Foreign Language Research and Education at Hiroshima University, and the results of the survey conducted to improve the validity of the list. The development of this list was initiated with the aim of contributing to English language education at Hiroshima University as a tool to support students’ goal setting and self-access learning, and data collection has continued since then. The previously published list was based on only one year of data, but given the expected role of this list, additional studies based on multi-year data collection are desirable. Therefore, a re-survey was conducted with newly collected data from 2016 to 2019. Unfortunately, however, this re-survey did not resolve all the remaining challenges, and we believe that the list should continue to be revised in the future. We suggest two issues that should be explored in the future. One is the range of score bands to be analyzed. In this study, a small number of students who scored 800 or above and 295 or below on the TOEIC® Listening & Reading IP Test were excluded from the analysis. Further study is needed to determine whether to exclude students in these score ranges, given the small number of students who fall in these ranges, or to expand the range of scores. The other issue is that, as in the previous survey, a can-do analysis was conducted using an existing list provided by the International Institute for Business Communication (IIBC). In the next and subsequent surveys, the list will need to be refined and modified by adding or deleting can-do statements.This work was supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B), Grant Number JP19H01283

    Transforming practice: checklists for delivering change

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    Delivering a revolution in evidence use requires a cultural change across society. For a wide range of groups (practitioners, knowledge brokers, organisations, organisational leaders, policy makers, funders, researchers, journal publishers, the wider conservation community, educators, writers, and journalists), options are described to facilitate a change in practice, and a series of downloadable checklists is provided

    Estimating the risk of species interaction loss in mutualistic communities

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    Funder: Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 (GB)Funder: Cambridge TrustFunder: Cambridge Depatment of ZoologyFunder: Grantham Foundation for the Protection of the Environment; funder-id: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100008118Funder: Kenneth Miller TrustFunder: ArcadiaInteractions between species generate the functions on which ecosystems and humans depend. However, we lack an understanding of the risk that interaction loss poses to ecological communities. Here, we quantify the risk of interaction loss for 4,330 species interactions from 41 empirical pollination and seed dispersal networks across 6 continents. We estimate risk as a function of interaction vulnerability to extinction (likelihood of loss) and contribution to network feasibility, a measure of how much an interaction helps a community tolerate environmental perturbations. Remarkably, we find that more vulnerable interactions have higher contributions to network feasibility. Furthermore, interactions tend to have more similar vulnerability and contribution to feasibility across networks than expected by chance, suggesting that vulnerability and feasibility contribution may be intrinsic properties of interactions, rather than only a function of ecological context. These results may provide a starting point for prioritising interactions for conservation in species interaction networks in the future
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