4 resultados para Western pine beetle.
em Universitat de Girona, Spain
Resumo:
Salvage logging is a common practice carried out in burned forests worldwide, and intended to mitigate the economic losses caused by wildfires. Logging implies an additional disturbance occurring shortly after fire, although its ecological effects can be somewhat mitigated by leaving wood debris on site. The composition of the bird community and its capacity to provide ecosystem services such as seed dispersal of fleshy-fruited plants have been shown to be affected by postfire logging. We assessed the effects of the habitat structure resulting from different postfire management practices on the bird community, in three burned pine forests in Catalonia (western Mediterranean). For this purpose, we focused on the group of species that is responsible for seed dispersal, a process which takes place primarily during the winter in the Mediterranean basin. In addition, we assessed microhabitat selection by seed disperser birds in such environments in relation to management practices. Our results showed a significant, positive relationship between the density of wood debris piles and the abundance of seed disperser birds. Furthermore, such piles were the preferred microhabitat of these species. This reveals an important effect of forest management on seed disperser birds, which is likely to affect the dynamics of bird-dependent seed dispersal. Thus, building wood debris piles can be a useful practice for the conservation of both the species and their ecosystem services, while also being compatible with timber harvesting
Resumo:
Study on the composition and distribution of Phytobenthic Assemblages of Addaia Bay (Menorca, Western Mediterranean)
Resumo:
Las herramientas ETL (Extract, Transform, Load – extraer, transformar, cargar) permiten modelizar flujos de datos, facilitando la ejecución automática de procesos repetitivos. El intercambio de información entre dos modelos de datos heterogéneos es un claro ejemplo del tipo de tareas que pueden abordarse con software ETL. El proyecto Kettle es una herramienta ETL con licencia LGPL (Library General Public License) que utiliza técnicas de computación grid (ejecución paralela y distribuida) para poder procesar grandes cantidades de datos en un tiempo reducido. Kettle combina una potente ejecución en modo servidor con una intuitiva herramienta de escritorio para modelar los procesos y configurar los parámetros de ejecución. GeoKettle es una extensión de Kettle, que añade la posibilidad de tratar datos con componente geográfica, si bien está limitado a datos vectoriales y a ciertas operaciones espaciales muy concreta. El Centro Temático Europeo de Usos del Suelo e Información Espacial (ETC-LUSI) está impulsando un proyecto complementario, llamado BeETLe, que pretende ampliar drásticamente las capacidades de análisis y transformación espacial de GeoKettle. Para ello se ha elegido el proyecto Sextante, una librería de análisis espacial que incluye más de doscientos algoritmos ráster y vectoriales. La intención del proyecto BeETLe es integrar el conjunto de algoritmos de Sextante en GeoKettle, de forma que estén disponibles como transformaciones de GeoKettle. Las principales características de la herramienta BeETLe incluyen: automatización de procesos de análisis espacial o de transformaciones repetitivas de datos espaciales, ejecución paralela y distribuida (grid computing), capacidad para procesar grandes cantidades de datos sin limitaciones de memoria, y soporte de datos ráster y vectorial. Los usuarios actuales de Sextante descubrirán que BeETLe les propone una forma de trabajo sencilla e intuitiva, que añade a Sextante toda la potencia que ofrecen las herramientas ETL para procesar y transformar información en bases de datos
Resumo:
Ireland’s waters constitute one of the richest habitats for cetaceans in Europe. Marine mammals, particularly cetaceans, are known to be definitive hosts of digestive parasites from the Fm.Anisakidae. The main aim of this study is to collect and compile all the information available out there regarding parasites of the Fm. Anisakidae and their definitive hosts. Secondary objectives are to relate the presence of cetacean species with the presence of parasites of the Fm. Anisakidae and to determine whether this greater number of cetaceans relates to a greater level of parasitism. Prevalence and burdens of anisakids in definitive hosts vary widely with host species, geographic location, and season. Results from several post-mortem exams are given. However, they cannot be compared due to differences in collecting techniques. Anisakis simplex is the most commonly and widespread parasite found in the majority of the samples and in a major number of hosts, which include harbour porpoise, short-beaked common dolphin and bottlenose dolphin. Studies on harbour porpoise obtained prevalences of Anisakis spp. of 46% (n=26) and of 100% (n= 12). Another study in common dolphin reported a prevalence of 68% (n=25). Several reasons could influence the variations in the presence of Anisakis. Studies on commercially exploited fish have reported prevalences of Anisakis simplex ranging from 65-100% in wild Atlantic salmon and from 42-53.4% in Atlantic cod