866 resultados para Steppe birds
Resumo:
Diese Magisterarbeit setzt sich zum Ziel, herauszufinden, in welcher Weise der Autor Janosch die Sprache in seinen Kinderbüchern kreativ mit den modifizierten Phraseologismen benutzt. Seine Sprache ist auffällig im Vergleich zu vielen anderen Kinderbuchautoren, die meistens einfache Sprache für Kinder schreiben wollen. Janosch möchte aber, dass sowohl die Kinder als auch erwachsene Vorleser Spaß beim Lesen haben würden. Diese Arbeit stellt zuerst die Theorie der Phraseologismen vor: Merkmale, Typen und Klassifikation der Phraseologismen sind notwendig für die Analyse der modifizierten Phraseologismen. Die mehr speziellen Eigenschaften der Phraseologismen, wie die zwei Lesarten, die Idiomatizität, Modifikation und Variation werden danach diskutiert. Der Schriftsteller Janosch wird in dem dritten Kapitel kurz vorgestellt: sein Leben und seine Werke. Als Materialien habe ich die vier Kinderbücher von Janosch ausgewählt, nämlich Oh, so schön ist Panama, Onkel Puschkin guter Bär, Janosch erzählt Grimm’s Märchen und Das neue große Janosch-Lesebuch. Nach Janosch wird die Kinderliteratur allgemein und die Phraseologismen in Kinderbüchern betrachtet. Die Methode besteht darin, die modifizierten Phraseologismen in dem Primärmaterial zu suchen und zu klassifizieren. Das Ziel ist herauszufinden, warum der Schriftsteller den jeweiligen Phraseologismus umformuliert hat. Als Ergebnis der Analyse bildeten sich sechs Klassen, die sich nach Strukturzügen unterscheiden. Die größte Gruppe sind die modifizierten Verstärkungsphraseologismen, andere sind z. B. die Phraseologismen, die zwei Lesarten aufweisen, Kontamination von zwei Phraseologismen und in der Tierwelt angesiedelte Phraseologismen. Insgesamt wurden 31 modifizierte Phraseologismen ausgewertet.
Resumo:
The paper presents a historiographic context helpful in the current investigations of the cultural contacts between the societies of the east and west of Europe in the borderland of Podolia and moldova in the late Eneolithic and the prologue of the Bronze age . The focus is on the state of research (chiefly taxonomic and topogenetic) into the sequence of taxa in the age of early ‘barrow-building’, identified in the funerary rituals of societies settling the forest-steppe of the north- western Black Sea Coast in the 4th/3rd-2nd millennium BC .
Resumo:
"The English edition of this work appeared under the title of 'Buffon's Natural history, &c.'"
Resumo:
In late summer 2010 a mosquito born flavivirus not previously reported in Europe called Bagaza virus (BAGV) caused high mortality in red-legged partridges (Alectoris rufa) and ring-necked pheasants (Phasianus colchicus). We studied clinical findings, lesions and viral antigen distribution in naturally BAGV infected game birds in order to understand the apparently higher impact on red-legged partridges. The disease induced neurologic signs in the two galliform species and, to a lesser extent, in common wood pigeons (Columba palumbus). In red-legged partridges infection by BAGV caused severe haemosiderosis in the liver and spleen that was absent in pheasants and less evident in common wood pigeons. Also, BAGV antigen was present in vascular endothelium in multiple organs in red-legged partridges, and in the spleen in common wood pigeons, while in ring-necked pheasants it was only detected in neurons and glial cells in the brain. These findings indicate tropism of BAGV for endothelial cells and a severe haemolytic process in red-legged partridges in addition to the central nervous lesions that were found in all three species.
Resumo:
This excel file contains the data underlying the analyses reported in Marzluff, JM, etal. 2016. PLoS One: Breeding Dispersal by Birds in a Dynamic Urban Ecosystem.
Determining conservation priority areas for Palearctic passerine migrant birds in sub-Saharan Africa
Resumo:
Migratory bird species breeding in the Palearctic and overwintering in sub-Saharan Africa face multiple conservation challenges. As a result, many of these species have declined in recent decades, some dramatically. We therefore used the best available database for the distribution of 68 passerine migrants in sub-Saharan Africa to determine priority regions for their conservation. After modeling each species’ distribution using BIOMOD software, we entered the resulting species distributions at a 1° × 1° grid resolution into MARXAN software. We then used several different selection procedures that varied the boundary length modifier, species penalty factor, and the inclusion of grid cells with high human footprint and with protected areas. While results differed between selection procedures, four main regions were regularly selected: (1) one centered on southern Mali; (2) one including Eritrea, central Sudan, and northern Ethiopia; (3) one encompassing southwestern Kenya and much of Tanzania and Uganda; and (4) one including much of Zimbabwe and southwestern Zambia. We recommend that these four regions become priority regions for research and conservation efforts for the bird species considered in this study.
Resumo:
Foraging strategies and diet selection play an essential role in individual survival and reproductive success. The study of feeding ecology becomes crucial when it concerns endangered species such as the Little Bustard (Tetrax tetrax), whose populations are suffering strong declines as a consequence of agricultural intensification. Despite the fact that several populations are overwintering in areas affected by agricultural transformation, nothing is known about how feeding behavior responds to these changes. We studied for the first time the winter diet composition of the Little Bustard in Spain and compared it between areas with two different farming systems: dry and irrigated farmland. Diet was studied through the micro-histological analysis of 357 droppings collected in 16 locations across the wintering range of the Little Bustard in Spain. Up to 62 plant species were identified. Most consumed species were cultivated legumes (46.7%) and dicotyledon weeds (45.6%), while monocotyledons were scarcely consumed (7.7%). Diet composition differed significantly between dry and irrigated farmland areas. In irrigated areas, diet was mainly composed of legumes, in particular alfalfa (Medicago sativa). In contrast, in dry farmland areas diet was more diverse, composed mainly of weeds (Compositae, Papaveraceae, and Cruciferae) and also cultivated legumes, particularly vetch (Vicia sativa). These results suggest that legume crops could be an effective measure to improve habitat quality in areas with scarce food resources. However, in the case of irrigated areas, the strong reliance on alfalfa could make the Little Bustard more vulnerable to changes in land use. This study is the first step to understand the winter trophic requirements of the endangered Little Bustard, but further research is necessary to understand the food requirements of this species during the entire annual cycle.
Resumo:
Montados form a heterogeneous landscape of wooded matrix dominated by cork and/or holm oak with open areas characterized by fuzzy boundaries. Montado supports a high biological diversity associated to low intensity management and a landscape diversity provided by a continuous gradient of land cover. Among other features this permits the classification of montados as a High Nature Value (HNV) system. We assessed the role of birds as HNV indicators for montado, and tested several bird groups—farmland, edge, forest generalists and forest specialists species; and some universal indicators such as species conservation status, Shannon’s diversity index and species richness. Our study areas covered the North–South distribution of cork oak in Portugal, and we surveyed the breeding bird communities across 117 sampling sites. In addition to variables related to management and sanitary status, we considered variables that characterize the landscape heterogeneity inside the montado—trees and shrub density and richness of woody vegetation. Our results suggest that specific bird guilds can be used as HNV indicators of particular typologies of montado, and highlight the need to develop an indicator that could be transversally applied to all types of montado.