نتایج جستجو برای: habitat degradation

تعداد نتایج: 203316  

2017
Mwangi Githiru Urbanus Mutwiwa Simon Kasaine Bruce Schulte

The two major conservation issues for drylands of Africa are habitat loss or degradation and habitat fragmentation, largely from agriculture, charcoal production, and infrastructural development. A key question for management is how these landscapes can retain their critical ecological functions and services, while simultaneously supporting resilient livelihoods. It is a clear nexus question in...

ژورنال: مرتع 2023

Background and objectives: Mountain habitats, due to their climatic conditions, are considered to be very sensitive areas and generally have less plant diversity compared to the lower elevations. Unfortunately, in the past years, due to human attacks, parts of these areas have been destroyed and now some areas are either devoid of vegetation or have very little vegetation. Since Crataegus and B...

2012
Jessica R. Henkel BRyan J. sigel

The 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill, the largest ever accidental release of oil into marine waters, affected hundreds of miles of US northern Gulf of Mexico coastline that is important habitat for migratory shorebirds. Shorebirds are particularly susceptible to oil contamination because of their subsurface probe-foraging behavior and reliance on intertidal habitat. More than one million migrat...

2010
TimoThy J. Beechie

Process-based restoration aims to reestablish normative rates and magnitudes of physical, chemical, and biological processes that sustain river and floodplain ecosystems. Ecosystem conditions at any site are governed by hierarchical regional, watershed, and reach-scale processes controlling hydrologic and sediment regimes; floodplain and aquatic habitat dynamics; and riparian and aquatic biota....

2006
A. Asha MELLOR Robert F. ROCKWELL

Responding to degradation in their original coastal habitat, increasing numbers of lesser snow geese are rearing their broods farther inland. Goslings collected in this inland, fresh water habitat have substantially lower loads of two species of caecal nematodes than do goslings collected in coastal, salt marsh habitat. This likely reflects differences between the habitats in the levels of infe...

2011
William F. Laurance

Humankind has dramatically transformed much of the Earth’s surface and its natural ecosystems. This process is not new—it has been ongoing for millennia—but it has accelerated sharply over the last two centuries, and especially in the last several decades. Today, the loss and degradation of natural habitats can be likened to a war of attrition. Many natural ecosystems are being progressively ra...

2013
Julie Anderson Alistair Voller

This study investigates the effects of habitat fragmentation on an Angola black-andwhite colobus (Colobus angolensis palliatus) metapopulation in southern Kenya. 124 coastal forest fragments were surveyed in 2001. Fifty-five C. a. palliatus populations were found during this survey, (44% habitat patch occupancy), with an estimated national population estimate of 3,100 5,000 individuals. Colobus...

Journal: :Brazilian journal of biology = Revista brasleira de biologia 2014
F Marques-Santos U Wischhoff M Rodrigues

The Cinereous Warbling-finch Poospiza cinerea (Emberizidae) is a Neotropical grassland bird considered rare, with population declining due to habitat loss and classified as vulnerable. However, the species conspicuously remains in several degraded areas, suggesting that it may be favored by these environments. Studies which focus on this species were inexistent until 2012, making questionable a...

2003
K. C. Parkes DAVID G. HASKELL

There is recent concern over the status of many Neotropical migrant bird populations. Reports of declining numbers and the continuing loss and degradation of breeding and overwintering habitats have prompted an upsurge of interest in the conservation biology of these birds (review papers in Hagan and Johnston 1992). Fragmentation of the breeding habitat in North America often is cited as one of...

Journal: :Science 2008
David C Cannatella

Becker et al. (Reports, 14 December 2007, p. 1775) reported that forest amphibians with terrestrial development are less susceptible to the effects of habitat degradation than those with aquatic larvae. However, analysis with more appropriate statistical methods suggests there is no evidence for a difference between aquatic-reproducing and terrestrial-reproducing species.

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