Academic literature on the topic 'Adult dispersal'

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Journal articles on the topic "Adult dispersal"

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Kamler, Jan F., Warren B. Ballard, Eric M. Gese, Robert L. Harrison, and Seija M. Karki. "Dispersal characteristics of swift foxes." Canadian Journal of Zoology 82, no. 12 (December 1, 2004): 1837–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/z04-187.

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From 1997 to 2001, we monitored movements of 109 adult and 114 juvenile swift foxes, Vulpes velox (Say, 1823), at study sites in Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas to determine patterns of dispersal. Significantly more male (93%) than female (58%) juveniles dispersed, and both sexes had similar bimodal dispersal patterns with peaks in September–October and January–February. Adult dispersal occurred more evenly throughout the year, and significantly more male (32%) than female (5%) adults dispersed. Adult males tended to disperse after the death of their mate. Of dispersing foxes with known fates, settlement percentages in new territories were similar between juvenile males and females (40% overall), but they were significantly lower than for adults (89%). All other dispersing foxes with known fates died. Among juvenile females with known fates, similar percentages of philopatric and dispersing foxes reproduced as yearlings (50% overall), so the benefits of dispersal versus philopatry were not clear. Although rarely reported for other species, adult males were an important dispersal cohort in swift foxes (43% of male dispersals and 25% of all dispersals). Because of the female-biased philopatry among swift foxes, dispersal of adult males likely decreased the chances for inbreeding (e.g., father–daughter breeding).
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Brody, Alison K., and Kenneth B. Armitage. "The effects of adult removal on dispersal of yearling yellow-bellied marmots." Canadian Journal of Zoology 63, no. 11 (November 1, 1985): 2560–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/z85-381.

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The relative importance of adult–yearling interaction and individual behavioral phenotypes on dispersal of yearling yellow-bellied marmots was investigated. Two marmot colonies near Gothic, Colorado, were studied; one was treated as an experimental colony from which all adults were removed, while the second was left undisturbed. Analysis of dispersal patterns and behavioral observations indicated that agonistic behavior between adults and yearlings is not necessary for dispersal to occur. Dispersal of male yearlings appears to be independent of adult–yearling interactions, although dispersal of female yearlings probably is mediated by social interactions. Individual behavioral phenotypes could not be used to predict which animals dispersed nor the relative timing of their departure. Dispersal can be viewed as an important mating strategy; for yearling males it is likely to be the only option available for reproductive success.
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McLellan, Bruce N., and Frederick W. Hovey. "Natal dispersal of grizzly bears." Canadian Journal of Zoology 79, no. 5 (May 1, 2001): 838–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/z01-051.

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We studied natal dispersal of grizzly bears (Ursus arctos), a solitary nonterritorial carnivore with a promiscuous mating system, between 1979 and 1998. Dispersal distances for 2-year-olds did not differ between males and females, but by 3 years of age, males had dispersed farther than females, and farther still by 4 years of age. Dispersal of both sexes was a gradual process, occurring over 1–4 years. From the locations of death, or last annual ranges, it was estimated that 18 males dispersed 29.9 ± 3.5 km (mean ± SE) and 12 females dispersed 9.8 ± 1.6 km. Eleven of these males dispersed the equivalent of at least the diameter of 1 adult male home range, whereas only 3 of the females dispersed at least the diameter of 1 adult female home range. The longest dispersals recorded were 67 km for a male and 20 km for a female. Because the social system consists of numerous overlapping home ranges of both sexes, long dispersal distances may not be required to avoid inbreeding or competition with relatives. Simple models suggest that 61% of the ranges of brother and sister pairs would not overlap, but the home range of every daughter would overlap her father's range. The home range of an estimated 19 ± 4 (mean ± SD) adult males, however, would overlap at least a portion of each female's range, thereby reducing the chance of a female mating with her brother or father. Understanding the dispersal behaviour of grizzly bears is essential for developing conservation strategies. Our results suggest that meta-population reserve designs must provide corridors wide enough for male grizzly bears to live in with little risk of being killed.
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Valenta, Kim, Mariah E. Hopkins, Melanie Meeking, Colin A. Chapman, and Linda M. Fedigan. "Spatial patterns of primary seed dispersal and adult tree distributions: Genipa americana dispersed by Cebus capucinus." Journal of Tropical Ecology 31, no. 6 (August 28, 2015): 491–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266467415000413.

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Abstract:The spatial distribution of adult trees is typically not expected to reflect the spatial patterns of primary seed dispersal, due to many factors influencing post-dispersal modification of the seed shadow, such as seed predation, secondary seed dispersal and density-dependent survival. Here, we test the hypothesis that spatial distributions of primary seed shadows and adult trees are concordant by analysing the spatial distributions of adult Genipa americana trees and the seed shadow produced by its key primary disperser, the capuchin monkey (Cebus capucinus) in a tropical dry forest in Costa Rica. We mapped the dispersal of G. americana seeds by the capuchins during focal animal follows (mean = 463 min, n = 50) of all adults in one free-ranging group over two early wet seasons (May–July, 2005 and 2006). We mapped the locations of all G. americana trees within a 60-ha plot that lay within the home range of the capuchin group. We conducted multiple spatial point pattern analyses comparing degrees of clustering of capuchin defecations and G. americana trees. We found that adult tree distributions and primary dispersal patterns are similarly aggregated at multiple spatial scales, despite the modification of the primary dispersal patterns and long dispersal distances.
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Chapman, Colin A., and Lauren J. Chapman. "Frugivory and the fate of dispersed and non-dispersed seeds of six African tree species." Journal of Tropical Ecology 12, no. 4 (July 1996): 491–504. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s026646740000972x.

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ABSTRACTThe relationship between seedling recruitment (under and away from parent trees) and the behaviour of seed dispersers and predators, was explored in a three-year study in Kibale National Park, Uganda. On the basis of 1261 hours of observation, the foraging activity of the diurnal frugivores which fed on fruit from six tree species was quantified. The fate of dispersed and non-dispersed seeds and seedlings was examined experimentally. The findings suggest that a trade-off exists between factors that promote seedling growth in areas with high seedling density and factors that promote dispersal by frugivores. For example, dispersal ofMimusops bagshaweiincreases both seed and seedling survival; seeds placed away from adult conspecifics had a 8% lower probability of disappearing than seeds placed under adults and seedlings away from adults had a 30% greater probability of surviving than seedlings grown under adults. In contrast, forUvariopsis congensis, dispersed seeds had a 56% greater probability of disappearing than seeds directly under a parent tree, while the survival of dispersed and non-dispersed seedlings was similar. Non-dispersed seed and seedling disappearance were correlated with the percentage of the fruit crop removed from focal trees, suggesting that the ability to survive under an adult maybe related to other aspects of the tree's life history.
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Caughlin, T. Trevor, Jake M. Ferguson, Jeremy W. Lichstein, Pieter A. Zuidema, Sarayudh Bunyavejchewin, and Douglas J. Levey. "Loss of animal seed dispersal increases extinction risk in a tropical tree species due to pervasive negative density dependence across life stages." Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 282, no. 1798 (January 7, 2015): 20142095. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2014.2095.

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Overhunting in tropical forests reduces populations of vertebrate seed dispersers. If reduced seed dispersal has a negative impact on tree population viability, overhunting could lead to altered forest structure and dynamics, including decreased biodiversity. However, empirical data showing decreased animal-dispersed tree abundance in overhunted forests contradict demographic models which predict minimal sensitivity of tree population growth rate to early life stages. One resolution to this discrepancy is that seed dispersal determines spatial aggregation, which could have demographic consequences for all life stages. We tested the impact of dispersal loss on population viability of a tropical tree species, Miliusa horsfieldii, currently dispersed by an intact community of large mammals in a Thai forest. We evaluated the effect of spatial aggregation for all tree life stages, from seeds to adult trees, and constructed simulation models to compare population viability with and without animal-mediated seed dispersal. In simulated populations, disperser loss increased spatial aggregation by fourfold, leading to increased negative density dependence across the life cycle and a 10-fold increase in the probability of extinction. Given that the majority of tree species in tropical forests are animal-dispersed, overhunting will potentially result in forests that are fundamentally different from those existing now.
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Hanson, Thor, Steven Brunsfeld, Bryan Finegan, and Lisette Waits. "Conventional and genetic measures of seed dispersal for Dipteryx panamensis (Fabaceae) in continuous and fragmented Costa Rican rain forest." Journal of Tropical Ecology 23, no. 6 (October 29, 2007): 635–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266467407004488.

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The effects of habitat fragmentation on seed dispersal can strongly influence the evolutionary potential of tropical forest plant communities. Few studies have combined traditional methods and molecular tools for the analysis of dispersal in fragmented landscapes. Here seed dispersal distances were documented for the tree Dipteryx panamensis in continuous forest and two forest fragments in Costa Rica, Central America. Distance matrices were calculated between adult trees (n = 283) and the locations of seeds (n = 3016) encountered along 100 × 4-m transects (n = 77). There was no significant difference in the density of seeds dispersed > 25 m from the nearest adult (n = 253) among sites. There was a strong correlation between the locations of dispersed seeds and the locations of overstorey palms favoured as bat feeding roosts in continuous forest and both fragments. Exact dispersal distances were determined for a subset of seeds (n = 14) from which maternal endocarp DNA could be extracted and matched to maternal trees using microsatellite analysis. Dispersal within fragments and from pasture trees into adjacent fragments was documented, at a maximum distance of 853 m. Results show no evidence of a fragmentation effect on D. panamensis seed dispersal in this landscape and strongly suggest bat-mediated dispersal at all sites.
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KOVATS, ZSOLT, JAN CIBOROWSKI, and LYNDA CORKUM. "Inland dispersal of adult aquatic insects." Freshwater Biology 36, no. 2 (October 1996): 265–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2427.1996.00087.x.

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Getzin, Stephan, Thorsten Wiegand, and Stephen P. Hubbell. "Stochastically driven adult–recruit associations of tree species on Barro Colorado Island." Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 281, no. 1790 (September 7, 2014): 20140922. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2014.0922.

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The spatial placement of recruits around adult conspecifics represents the accumulated outcome of several pattern-forming processes and mechanisms such as primary and secondary seed dispersal, habitat associations or Janzen–Connell effects. Studying the adult–recruit relationship should therefore allow the derivation of specific hypotheses on the processes shaping population and community dynamics. We analysed adult–recruit associations for 65 tree species taken from six censuses of the 50 ha neotropical forest plot on Barro Colorado Island (BCI), Panama. We used point pattern analysis to test, at a range of neighbourhood scales, for spatial independence between recruits and adults, to assess the strength and type of departure from independence, and its relationship with species properties. Positive associations expected to prevail due to dispersal limitation occurred only in 16% of all cases; instead a majority of species showed spatial independence (≈73%). Independence described the placement of recruits around conspecific adults in good approximation, although we found weak and noisy signals of species properties related to seed dispersal. We hypothesize that spatial mechanisms with strong stochastic components such as animal seed dispersal overpower the pattern-forming effects of dispersal limitation, density dependence and habitat association, or that some of the pattern-forming processes cancel out each other.
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Tomkins, A. R., D. J. Wilson, C. Thomson, and P. Allison. "Dispersal by passionvine hopper (Scolypopa australis) adults." New Zealand Plant Protection 53 (August 1, 2000): 185–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.30843/nzpp.2000.53.3632.

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Passionvine hopper (Scolypopa australis) (PVH) is a serious pest in some Bay of Plenty kiwifruit orchards with large numbers of PVH adults flying in from adjacent scrub A series of field experiments investigated their dispersal abilities Adult PVH released into an open area were recaptured on sticky traps up to 70 m downwind two hours later When released inside a kiwifruit orchard PVH gradually dispersed throughout a block of vines Sticky traps at different heights along an orchard border caught PVH up to 2 m above ground Different shaped (rectangle square or triangle) traps caught similar numbers of PVH adults
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Adult dispersal"

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Diakiw, Laura Oksana, and Laura Oksana Diakiw. "Determinants of the Adult Microbiome: Kinship, Dispersal, and Social Relationships." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/624111.

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Primates who disperse from their natal group may shape their adult stable gut microbiome through physical contact and shared environments with their new group members. However, it is possible that individuals retain the dominant microbiome composition that they developed as an infant in their natal group even after joining their new group, due to a combination of genetic inheritance and exposure to their natal group environment. Microbial exposure during early life, before an immune system has been developed, can exert strong selection on a developing individual, in effect creating a selection bottleneck. Therefore, the environmental signals transmitted from mother to infant are critical in developing an infant’s immunocompetence. Determining what adaptations take place in an individual’s gut microbiota during their life could help determine the maternal importance of gut microbe transmissions which may be essential to the evolutionary success of a species. We studied Eulemur rubriventer (red-bellied lemurs) who live in family groups. We tested whether individuals now living in different social groups as adults overlap in microbe composition, and if areas of overlap are distinct compared with unrelated individuals. We also tested whether the gut microbiomes of co-residents (dispersed adult group-mates) would be more similar than that of individuals living in different groups. Using census and genetic data, we determined the social group membership and relatedness of 15 individuals in Ranomafana National Park, Madagascar. Quantitative real-time PCR and Microbial 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing indicated that E. rubriventer kinship accounted for just 2.4% of variability in gut microbiome diversity. Our findings indicate that host adult social group explained 25% of the variation in composition of E. rubriventer microbiomes. Additional research incorporating an increased sample size to include additional kin dyads is necessary to fully understand the influence of genetic kinship and early life colonization on the GI microbiome. If initial microbial colonizing species are retained in adults, this demonstrates that early life colonization can persist through adulthood and perhaps preserve important microbial species across larger evolutionary time scales.
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Williams, Clair. "Metapopulation dynamics of the crested newt, Triturus cristatus." Thesis, University of Kent, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.314265.

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Sandeson, Pamela D. "Role of dispersal in the management of adult Colorado potato beetles, Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), on potato." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2000. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape2/PQDD_0019/MQ57246.pdf.

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Mbungu, Nsitu T. "Dispersal propensity of adult Colorado potato beetles (Coleoptera:Chrysomelidae) on potato and its implications on the insect resistance management plan." Thesis, McGill University, 2006. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=102810.

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A three-year (1998-2000) field and laboratory study conducted in Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada analyzed and quantified the dispersal of adult Colorado potato beetles within and between conventional and transgenic potato plots established according to the high-dose/refuge strategy. More specifically, the study addressed the following four predictions: (1) Adult Colorado potato beetle abundance or flight activity in transgenic potato fields is positively correlated to the abundance or flight activity in the immediately adjacent refuge field. (2) Colorado potato beetle intraspecific competition on potato plants will increase the flight take-off frequency of adult CPB; tolerating relatively high numbers of CPB egg masses or larvae or a high level of CPB defoliation on potato plants in the refuge could therefore be considered to increase the movement of beetles from the refuge to the transgenic field. (3) CPB flight take-off frequency will be higher on potato plants at the bloom than at the vegetative stage; planting of the non transgenic potato crop in the refuge earlier than the Bt transgenic potato crop in the main field could therefore be considered to increase movement of the Colorado potato beetles from the refuge to the transgenic field. (4) The aggregated distribution of CPB populations in the potato crop is caused by the presence of mating pairs; strategies changing the distribution of males and females in the refuge field could therefore be considered to increase dispersal from the refuge to the main crop field.
Population monitoring using plant counts, flight interception traps, flight landing traps and pitfall traps established that a transient population of adult CPB is present in the transgenic potato fields throughout the crop season and that the abundance of the beetle is higher than that required by the high dose/refuge strategy models. Furthermore results showed that the beetles invading the transgenic field population originate as much from the surrounding fields of conventional cultivars as from the adjacent refuges. It would therefore be possible to relax existing requirements for the refuge to be located immediately adjacent to the transgenic crop.
Like most insects, the adult CPB populations are aggregated and can be fitted to a negative binomial distribution over the crop season. This study revealed that the distribution results from the presence of mating pairs for the overwintered population and from the clumped pupation for the non breeding summer population. The activity of the males in search of females is at least partly responsible for the higher dispersal activity observed with the overwintered than with the summer populations. The comparatively low level of dispersal activity with the summer population could affect the efficacy of the high/dose refuge strategy during the later part of the crop season.
Results of flight chamber tests demonstrated that plant phenology and intraspecific competition have a positive effect on flight take-off frequency. These findings suggest that summer adult dispersal between the refuges and the transgenic crops could be stimulated by manipulating planting dates and the abundance of the different CPB life stages on the plants.
Together, the results of the thesis provide support for some of the premises of the high dose/refuge strategy and offer new information on the CPB dispersal that could be used to further improve its efficacy. Although the transgenic potato (NewLeaf) is not commercially available at this time, the threat of CPB resistance to new products or resistant cultivars under development makes it important to continue the research required by CPB resistance management plans.
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Courtney, Michael B. "Dispersal patterns and summer oceanic distribution of adult Dolly Varden from the Wulik River, Alaska, evaluated using satellite telemetry." Thesis, University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2015. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1588302.

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In Arctic Alaska, Dolly Varden Salvelinus malma is highly valued as a subsistence fish; however, little is known about oceanic dispersal or ecology. This study addresses this knowledge gap, by using a fisheries independent method, pop-up satellite archival tags (PSATs). In spring of 2012 and 2013, we attached 52 PSATs to Dolly Varden in a river in northwestern Alaska, which flows into the Arctic Ocean, to examine the marine dispersal, behavior and habitat occupancy of this species. Tagged Dolly Varden demonstrated two types of dispersal, including offshore and nearshore dispersal. The offshore type was the first documented northwesterly dispersal and occupancy of Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) areas of the Russian Chukchi Sea. While occupying this area, tagged Dolly Varden demonstrated affinity for the first 5 m of the water column, diel patterns in depth occupancy, and dive depths of up to 50 m, while experiencing a thermal environment of generally 3–7°C. During the nearshore dispersal type, Dolly Varden transited in coastal areas of northwest Alaska, likely returning to their natal rivers to spawn. While in nearshore areas, tagged Dolly Varden always occupied shallow waters (< 6 m), and experienced a rapidly changing thermal environment (± 15°C), including some waters temperatures cooler than -1°C. This study demonstrates that PSATs offer an alternative and effective platform with which to study several aspects of large adult Dolly Varden dispersal and ecology in areas where it is not practical or feasible to capture these fish, such as in coastal and offshore regions of Arctic Alaska. Additionally, the results of this study have increased our knowledge of the summer marine distribution, behavior and thermal environment of Dolly Varden in Arctic regions of Alaska, and this knowledge is important to several stake holders for the conservation of this important subsistence species.

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Qureshi, Jawwad Alam. "Dispersal of marked and feral adult European and southwestern corn borers and its impact on BT-corn resistance management /." Search for this dissertation online, 2003. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/ksu/main.

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Tapia, Fabián. "Adult demography and larval processes in coastal benthic populations : intertidal barnacles in Southern California and Baja California." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/39192.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Joint Program in Oceanography/Applied Ocean Science and Engineering (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Biology; and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), 2005.
Includes bibliographical references.
The geographic distribution and dynamics of coastal benthic populations are shaped by physical - biological interactions affecting larval dispersal and the demography of juvenile and adult individuals. This thesis focused on nearshore patterns of larval distribution and regional patterns in demography of intertidal barnacles in Southern and Baja California. Horizontal and vertical distributions, and the mortality rates of larvae, were assessed from short term (i.e. days) small- scale observations (0.1-1 km) in nearshore waters. Observations on spatial variability of adult barnacle demography were gathered over 1.5 years at scales of hundreds of kilometers. Stage-specific horizontal distributions and nearshore current measurements suggested that larvae of Balanus g-landula and Chthamalus spp. may experience limited dispersal. High mortality rates could further limit travel distances and the exchange of individuals among disjunct populations. Data on vertical distributions indicated that nauplii and cyprids of Balanus nubilus and Pollicipes polymerus occur at different depths. Nauplii remained near the surface at all times, whereas cyprids occurred in the bottom half of the water column.
(cont.) Such distributions, combined with vertical variability in horizontal flows, might cause the observed horizontal segregation of nauplii and cyprids. Differences in survival, growth rate, size structure, and per capita fertility of adult Balanus glandula were observed between Dana Point (Southern California) and Punta Baja (Baja California), a site located near the species' southern limit of distribution. Effects of spatial differences in demography on population persistence were assessed with a stage-structured matrix model. Model analyses indicated that the Punta Baja population is more susceptible to environmental stochasticity and more prone to local extinction than populations located further north. This thesis emphasizes the importance of characterizing factors that affect the dynamics of benthic populations at multiple spatial-temporal scales, and the usefulness of small scale high- frequency observations of nearshore phenomena, especially in relation with the dispersal of larvae.
by Fabián J. Tapia.
Ph.D.
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Ávalos, Masó Juan Antonio. "Factors influencing the mobility of Red Palm Weevil Rhynchophorus ferrugineus (Coleoptera: Dryophthoridae) adults." Doctoral thesis, Universitat Politècnica de València, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/59394.

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[EN] The management of Rhynchophorus ferrugineus (Coleoptera: Dryophthoridae), the worst threat for palm trees worldwide, consists in several preventive and curative techniques, but because of its low efficacy the insect still causes major economic and landscape losses. In order to define aspects that have facilitated its rapid dispersal and contribute to improving its management, the effects of vision and flight, which influence the mobility of R. ferrugineus, have been analysed. The chromatic preference of R. ferrugineus has been studied by analysing their captures in coloured bucket traps. Black traps capture the highest number of insects compared with the other colours studied, both when they contain olfactory attractants, as when these compounds are not used, demonstrating that colour by itself is a crucial attraction factor. Moreover, the spectral reflectance of studied colours and of some P. canariensis tissues has been analysed. The wavelength spectrum of black shows great similarity to that of fibres of P. canariensis, so this may be the reason why R. ferrugineus prefers this colour. Regarding sex ratio of the insect in traps, female captures are significantly greater in those baited with olfactory attractants. However, a higher number of female captures does not always occur when these compounds are not used. On the other hand, the study of sex ratio in natural populations of the insect demonstrates that the proportion is one female per male. Therefore, the greater number of captures of females in commercial traps is due exclusively to their greater attraction towards the olfactory attractants used. Another of the analysed aspects has been the flight potential of R. ferrugineus under laboratory conditions. In order to know more about the mobility of this insect, different parameters have been studied using a computer-monitored flight mill. The selected parameters used to define the R. ferrugineus flight potential have been the number of flights, total distance flown, longest single flight, flight duration, and average and maximum speed. Moreover, the influence of sex, body size, and age of the adults on the aforementioned parameters has been examined. R. ferrugineus sex does not have a significant effect on the compared flight parameters. The body size in females is significantly greater, but this does not influence their flight potential. A higher percentage of flight is observed for adults with an age range of 8-23 days old, compared to the 1-7 day old adults. However, age does not significantly influence their flight potential. By analysing the longest single flight undertaken by each adult, up to 63% of the insects can be classified as short-distance flyers (<500m), 27.3% as medium-distance flyers (500-5000m), and >9% as long-distance flyers (>5000m). Finally, the flight behaviour and dispersal of R. ferrugineus have been analysed under field conditions using the mark-release-recapture method. This test focused on detecting the influence of different factors, such as sex, temperature, relative humidity, and solar radiation, in the take-off and dispersal of the adult insects. Take-off probability of R. ferrugineus adults is significantly greater in males Moreover, this probability increases when temperature and solar radiation rise. Concerning the insect dispersal by flying, the number of recaptures is influenced by temperature, increasing significantly when this factor increases. Likewise, dispersal distances also increase significantly as temperatures rise. The insect tends to fly distances <500m (77.1% of recaptured adults), following the same tendency observed in studies performed using the flight mill. However, R. ferrugineus is able to travel up to 7km, being recorded under laboratory conditions a potential flight up to 20km. To conclude, dispersal time of the adults is very short (more than 90% of the adults were recaptured during the first 7 days), being significantly lower when relative humidity increases.
[ES] El manejo de Rhynchophorus ferrugineus (Coleoptera: Dryophthoridae), una de las peores amenazas para las palmeras en el mundo, se lleva a cabo mediante la aplicación de diversas técnicas de prevención y control, pero debido a la baja eficacia de éstas la plaga continúa causando importantes pérdidas económicas y paisajísticas. Para definir los aspectos que han intervenido en su dispersión y contribuir a mejorar su manejo, se ha analizado el efecto de la visión y el vuelo en la movilidad de los adultos de R. ferrugineus. Se ha estudiado la preferencia cromática mediante el análisis de sus capturas en trampas cubo coloreadas. Las trampas negras capturan el mayor nº de insectos en comparación con el resto de colores estudiados, tanto cuando contienen atrayentes olfativos como cuando no los contienen, demostrando que el color por sí mismo es un factor importante de atracción. Además, se ha analizado el espectro de longitud de onda de los colores estudiados y de diversos tejidos de P. canariensis. El espectro del color negro muestra gran similitud con el de las fibras de P. canariensis, es por esto por lo que R. ferrugineus podría presentar esta preferencia. En relación a la proporción de sexos en trampas que contienen atrayentes olfativos, las capturas de hembras son significativamente más elevadas. En cambio, sin éstos no siempre se produce un mayor nº de capturas de este sexo. Por otro lado, el estudio de la proporción de sexos en poblaciones naturales muestra una ratio de una hembra por macho. Por tanto, las mayores capturas de hembras en trampas se deben a una mayor atracción de éstas hacia los atrayentes olfativos. Otro aspecto estudiado ha sido el potencial de vuelo de R. ferrugineus bajo condiciones de laboratorio. Con la finalidad de conocer la movilidad de este insecto se han analizado diversos parámetros mediante la utilización de un molinillo de vuelo computerizado. Los parámetros estudiados han sido: nº vuelos, distancia total volada, vuelo más largo, duración del vuelo y velocidades media y máxima. Además, se ha analizado como influye el sexo, el tamaño del cuerpo y la edad de los adultos en dichos parámetros de vuelo. El sexo de R. ferrugineus no muestra un efecto significativo sobre los parámetros de vuelo comparados. El tamaño del cuerpo de las hembras es significativamente mayor, pero no influye estadísticamente en su potencial de vuelo. En adultos con edades de entre 8-23 días se observa un mayor porcentaje de vuelo que en aquellos con 1-7 días de edad. En cambio, la edad no influye significativamente sobre su potencial de vuelo. Al analizar el vuelo más largo, obtenemos que >63% de los insectos se clasifican como voladores de corta distancia (<500m), el 27.3% de media distancia (500-5000m), y >9% de larga distancia (>5000m). Finalmente, se ha analizado en campo el comportamiento de vuelo y dispersión de R. ferrugineus mediante la técnica de marcaje-suelta-recaptura. Este ensayo ha permitido estudiar la influencia del sexo, la temperatura (Tª), la humedad relativa y la radiación solar, en el despegue y dispersión de los adultos. La probabilidad de despegue de R. ferrugineus es significativamente mayor en machos. Además, esta probabilidad se incrementa cuando la Tª y la radiación solar aumentan. Respecto a la dispersión del insecto mediante el vuelo, el nº de recapturas se ve influenciado por la Tª, aumentando significativamente cuando ésta se incrementa. De la misma manera, las distancias de dispersión también se incrementan significativamente a media que lo hace la Tª. El insecto tiende a volar distancias <500m (77.1% de los adultos recapturados), siguiendo la misma tendencia observada en laboratorio. No obstante, R. ferrugineus es capaz de recorrer hasta 7km, llegando a registrarse vuelos potenciales en laboratorio de hasta 20km. Por último, el tiempo de dispersión de los adultos es muy corto (>90% se recapturaron en los 7 primeros días), reduciéndose
[CAT] El maneig de Rhynchophorus ferrugineus (Coleoptera: Dryophthoridae), una de les pitjors amenaces per a les palmeres en tot el món, es porta a terme mitjançant l'aplicació de diverses tècniques de prevenció i control, però degut a la baixa eficàcia d'aquestes l'insecte continua causant importants pèrdues econòmiques i paisatgístiques. Per a definir els aspectes que han intervingut en la seua dispersió i contribuir a la millora del seu maneig, s'ha analitzat l'efecte que tenen la visió i el vol en la mobilitat dels adults de R. ferrugineus. S'ha estudiat la preferència cromàtica mitjançant l'anàlisi de les seues captures en trampes poal acolorides. Les trampes negres capturen el major nombre d'insectes en comparació amb la resta de colors estudiats, tant quan contenen atraients olfactius com quan no els contenen, demostrant que el color per ell mateix és un factor important d'atracció. A més, s'ha analitzat l'espectre de longitud d'ona dels colors estudiats i de diversos teixits de P. canariensis. L'espectre del color negre mostra gran similitud amb el de les fibres de P. canariensis, és per açò pel que R. ferrugineus podria presentar aquesta preferència. En relació a la proporció de sexes a les trampes que contenen atraients olfactius, les captures de femelles són significativament més elevades. En canvi, sense aquests no sempre es produeix un major nombre de captures d'aquest sexe. Per altra banda, l'estudi de la proporció de sexes en poblacions naturals demostra que la ràtio és d'una femella per mascle. Per tant, les majors captures de femelles en trampes es deuen a una major atracció d'aquestes cap als atraients olfactius utilitzats. Altre aspecte estudiat ha sigut el potencial de vol de R. ferrugineus sota condicions de laboratori. Amb la finalitat de conèixer la mobilitat d'aquest insecte s'han analitzat diversos paràmetres mitjançant la utilització d'un molinet de vol computeritzat. Els paràmetres estudiats han sigut: nombre de vols, distància total volada, vol més llarg, duració del vol i velocitats mitjana i màxima dels vols. A més, s'ha analitzat com influeixen el sexe, el tamany del cos i l'edat dels adults en dits paràmetres de vol. El sexe de R. ferrugineus no mostra un efecte significatiu sobre els paràmetres de vol comparats. El tamany del cos de les femelles és significativament major, però no influeix estadísticament en el seu potencial de vol. En adults amb edats d'entre 8-23 dies s'observa un major percentatge de vol que en aquells amb 1-7 dies d'edat. En canvi, l'edat no influeix significativament sobre el seu potencial de vol. En analitzar el vol més llarg, obtenim que més del 63% dels insectes es classifiquen com voladors de curta distància (<500m), el 27.3% de mitja distància (500-5000m), i >9% de llarga distància (>5000m). Finalment, s'ha analitzat en camp el comportament de vol i dispersió de R. ferrugineus mitjançant la tècnica de marcatge-solta-recaptura. Aquest assaig ha permès estudiar la influència del sexe, la temperatura, la humitat relativa i la radiació solar, en l'enlairament i dispersió dels adults. La probabilitat d'enlairament de R. ferrugineus és significativament major en mascles A més, aquesta probabilitat s'incrementa quan la temperatura i la radiació solar augmenten. Respecte a la dispersió de l'insecte mitjançant el vol, el nombre de recaptures es veu influenciat per la temperatura, augmentant significativament quan aquesta s'incrementa. De la mateixa manera, les distàncies de dispersió també s'incrementen significativament a mesura que ho fa la temperatura. L'insecte tendeix a volar distàncies <500m (77.1% dels adults recapturats), seguint la mateixa tendència observada en laboratori. No obstant, R. ferrugineus és capaç de recórrer fins a 7km, arribant-se a registrar vols potencials en laboratori de fins a 20km. Per últim, el temps de dispersió dels adults és molt curt (>90% es recapturaren en els 7 primers die
Ávalos Masó, JA. (2015). Factors influencing the mobility of Red Palm Weevil Rhynchophorus ferrugineus (Coleoptera: Dryophthoridae) adults [Tesis doctoral no publicada]. Universitat Politècnica de València. https://doi.org/10.4995/Thesis/10251/59394
TESIS
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Oliveira, Mário Sérgio Teixeira de. "A diáspora nordestina e a escola: entre a dispersão e o encontro." Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, 2004. http://www.bdtd.uerj.br/tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=31.

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Este trabalho, que tem como objeto de estudo a educação de jovens e adultos (EJA), objetivou estudar a produção de sentidos da educação para as alunas e alunos da EJA e como estes ressignificam o conceito de cidadania associado à escolarização. Para atender a este objetivo, procedeu-se a uma investigação de feição etnográfica que realizou a observação sistemática de duas escolas noturnas de ensino fundamental da rede pública do Estado do Rio de Janeiro. Além da observação sistemática, registrada em um diário de campo, foram realizadas entrevistas com alunos e alunas (N=28) e professoras (N=9). Houve, também, a coleta de dados demográficos e escolares - dos sujeitos da pesquisa, assim como de documentos e materiais didáticos que circulavam nestes espaços da ação pedagógica. Na análise dos dados fez-se a articulação destes dados com o contexto sócio-histórico de produção das identidades estudantis, o que contou, também, com o apoio de alguns dados estatísticos. Assim, procurou-se estabelecer um diálogo para além dos discursos constituidores do modelo de escola, já naturalizados e refletidos na intencionalidade das leis, nas ementas e conteúdos programáticos, apresentados pelas instituições responsáveis pela EJA. Na análise e interpretação dos dados levantados, se pode constatar a realidade da migração nordestina, em sua maioria no contexto do espaço territorial brasileiro; as estratégias de sobrevivência encetadas por esses imigrantes; a rede de solidariedade que envolve as soluções em termos da busca do trabalho na metrópole e das relações afetivas; o valor atribuído por esses estudantes ao estar na escola e ao permanecer naquele espaço da ação educativa; e a construção de um sentido de pertença social e de cidadania que o ler e o escrever ia conferindo a esses alunos e alunas, em sua busca por formação e profissionalização.
This paper, whose subject is the analysis of the education of youngsters and adults (EJA/YAE) presents, as its main and only objective, the generation of interest for a formal education, by the students at the EJA/YAE, and also underlines how these interests re-define the concept of citizenship associated with the act of schooling. To understand this objective, we proceeded to do an investigation of ethnographical nature, based on a systematic observation of two different night schools of elementary education that belong to the public school system of the State of Rio de Janeiro. Apart from the systematic observation, registered in a working field diary, a few interviews were conducted with students of both sexes (N=28) and teachers (N=9). There was also a data collecting, both on demographic origin and education level, of the subjects of this research, as well as on documents and didactic material that were circulating within this pedagogical acting spaces. On the data analysis we have tried to combine/conjugate these data with the social-historical context of the generation of the students identities, and this counted also with a few statistical supports. Therefore, we have tried to establish a dialogue that would surpass the speeches that constitute the model of a school, already conditioned and reflected on the intentionality of the laws, memorandum books and programmatic contents, introduced by the institutions responsible for the EJA/YAE. On the analysis and interpretation of the collected data, it is possible to come to the reality of the migration specifically the Northern one , in the context of the Brazilian territorial space; the strategies for survival created by these immigrants; the solidarity network which involves the solutions in terms of searching for jobs in the metropolis and on the affection relations; the value conferred by these students when in school and when staying in that educating acting spaces; and the construction of a social sense and a belonging citizenship, that reading and writing may confer to these students, boys or girls, on their search for a formal and/or professionalizing education.
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Minot, Marceau. "Traits biologiques et facteurs environnementaux structurant les mouvements locaux et la dispersion des libellules( Insecta, Odonata) dans les réseaux de mares. Pond creation and restoration:: patterns of odonate colonisation and community dynamics Biometry of the large dragonfly Anax imperator (Odonata, Aeshnidae):: A study of traits from larval development to adults Effects of water pollution on the larval development and condition of the adults at emergence in Aeshna cyanea (Odonata: Aeshnidae) Habitat use and movements of a large dragonfly (Odonata: Anax imperator) in a pond network. Diversity and genetic structure of Anax imperator populations at the European scale." Thesis, Normandie, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020NORMR031.

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Au cours des dernières décennies, le nombre de mares a connu un déclin de plus de 50 % dans les pays européens, atteignant parfois jusqu'à 90 % dans certaines régions. Cette diminution a entraîné une forte perte de connectivité entre les mares. Pourtant, ces écosystèmes petits et dispersés sont essentiels au cycle de vie d'une grande diversité d'espèces d'eau douce. Les politiques d'aménagement du territoire, comme la création des Trames Vertes et Bleues en France, visent à améliorer les continuités écologiques pour permettre le maintien des populations existantes et les échanges entre elles. Cependant, les études de connectivité entre les mares doivent prendre en compte les capacités de dispersion des espèces et cette information fait souvent défaut pour orienter les mesures de restauration. Dans le présent travail, nous avons étudié les capacités de dispersion des libellules à plusieurs échelles spatiales ainsi que les caractéristiques biologiques et les facteurs environnementaux qui façonnent leurs mouvements. Dans la première partie, nous avons évalué la colonisation par les libellules de 20 mares normandes pendant les trois années suivant leur création ou leur restauration. Les résultats mettent en évidence des taux de colonisation élevés pendant la première année et aucune différence de richesse spécifique n'a été constatée entre les mares nouvellement créées ou restaurées. Cela suggère que la restauration des mares après un assèchement total ne devrait pas toujours être prioritaire par rapport à la création de nouvelles mares dans les stratégies de gestion. Nous avons constaté que les espèces généralistes étaient davantage présentes la première année après la création ou la restauration des mares, alors que la présence d’espèces spécialistes des forêts augmentait avec l'âge du plan d’eau. Les résultats ont également mis en évidence que le contexte paysager autour des mares (i.e. milieu forestier ou ouvert) avait un effet sur la composition des communautés de libellules. Enfin, l'abondance totale des espèces d'odonates était liée à la densité des plans d’eau alentours. Ce résultat souligne que les mares très connectées peuvent abriter des populations plus importantes que les mares isolées et donc être plus résistantes aux perturbations. La deuxième partie fournit des éléments sur le développement larvaire d'Anax imperator et la relation entre les caractéristiques morphologiques des larves et des adultes. Les résultats suggèrent que la survie de cette espèce pendant la période de maturation pourrait dépendre de la longueur des individus. Nous avons également essayé d'étudier la dispersion natale en marquant 87 individus à l'émergence, mais seuls deux mâles ont été retrouvés après la période de maturation. Enfin, l'effet de deux polluants de l'eau (Round-up et DEET) sur le développement larvaire et les adultes d'Aeshna cyanea a également été étudié à différentes concentrations. Les larves ont été élevées dans des conditions de laboratoire et exposées à des concentrations allant jusqu'à 30 mg.L-1 des deux polluants. Aucun effet des polluants sur les conditions morphologiques des larves ou des ténéraux n'a été détecté, ce qui suggère que A. cyanea est une espèce tolérante aux potentielles pollutions de l'eau dans les mares. Le niveau de la protéine de stress HSP70 était également similaire selon les différents traitements, mais les adultes ténéraux présentaient des niveaux de stress plus élevés que les larves, ce qui suggère que l'émergence a provoqué un stress élevé chez les individus
During the last decades, the number of ponds decreased by more than 50 % in European countries, occasionally reaching up to 90 % in some regions. Their decline in number has led to a strong loss of connectivity between waterbodies. Yet, these small and scattered ecosystems are essential for the life cycle of a high diversity of freshwater species. Land use policies like the creation of Greenways and Blueways in France aim to improve ecological continuities to allow maintenance of existent biological populations and exchanges between them. However, the connectivity between ponds must be considered according to the dispersal abilities of freshwater species and this information often lacks to guide restoration measures. In the present work, we studied the dispersal abilities of dragonflies on several spatial scales and investigated the biological traits and environmental factors that shaped their movements. In the first part, we evaluated the colonization of 20 ponds in Normandy by dragonflies during three years after pond restoration or pond creation. The results highlight high colonization rates during the first year and no difference in species richness was found between newly created or restored ponds. This suggests that restoration of ponds after complete drought should not always be prioritized over pond creation in management strategies. We found that generalist species were more present in the first year after pond creation or restoration, whereas the occurrence of forest specialists increased with the age of the pond. The results also highlighted that the landscape context around ponds (i.e. forest vs. open lands) had an effect on the composition of dragonfly communities. Finally, the total abundance of odonate species was related to the density of other ponds in the surroundings. This result emphasizes that highly connected ponds can support larger populations than isolated ones and thus, be more resilient to perturbations. The second part provides insights into the larval development of Anax imperator and the relationship between morphological traits of larvae and adults. The results suggest that the survival of this species might depend on its body length during the maturation period. We also tried to study the natal dispersal by marking 87 individuals at emergence, but only two males were resighted after the maturation period. Finally, the effect of two water pollutants (i.e. Round-up and DEET) at different concentrations was also investigated on the larval development and adults of Aeshna cyanea. Larvae were reared under laboratory conditions and exposed to concentrations up to 30 mg.L-1 of the two pollutants. No effect of the pollutants was detected on the morphological conditions of larvae or tenerals, suggesting that A. cyanea is tolerant to potential water pollution of ponds. The level of HSP70 stress protein was also similar according to the different treatments, but teneral adults presented higher levels of stress than larvae, suggesting that emergence induced a high stress in the individuals. The third part focuses on the dispersal of A. imperator. We first assessed the local movements within a pond network in the Normandy region
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Books on the topic "Adult dispersal"

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Pratt, Paul D. Within and between plant dispersal and distributions of adult females and immatures of Neoseiulus californicus and N. fallacis (Acari: Phytoseiidae) in bean and apple plant systems. 1997.

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Dawson, Melanie V. Edith Wharton and the Modern Privileges of Age. University Press of Florida, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813066301.001.0001.

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This project explores age-based obsessions of the modern era, situating the charting and interrogation of age among modernity’s central preoccupations, with particular attention to the gendering of old age and the creation of intergenerational conflicts. While chronological considerations privileged the young and tended to exclude those past adulthood, much of modern literature interrogated the age-based forms of standardization rooted in the era’s understanding of personal development. By focusing on the ways that age was constructed so as to uphold the ideal of a coherent, stable self, this literature interrogates theories of development that were believed to govern life trajectories, and with them, ideals about progress, often to the point of envisioning aging as a form of unwelcome dissolution. The era’s literary texts, however, complicated such views by adding to familiar figures of the flapper and the young generation a host of others that broke age thresholds: the mature youth, the youthful adult, the young middle-aged, the rejuvenate, the child bride, the aged, and the ghost. All such figures invited an interrogation of youth’s supposed ascendancy by suggesting that modernity’s age-based privileges were more varied and more widely dispersed than they seemed. If youth appeared dominant in terms of bodily forms and youthful energies, the more mature are revealed as possessing resources, experiences, and strategies that counter the assets of the young, leading to scenarios where the outcomes of intergenerational conflicts were both volatile and unexpected.
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Book chapters on the topic "Adult dispersal"

1

Service, M. W. "Mark-Recapture Techniques and Adult Dispersal." In Mosquito Ecology, 652–751. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-8113-4_9.

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Service, M. W. "Mark-Recapture Techniques and Adult Dispersal." In Mosquito Ecology, 652–751. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-1868-2_9.

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Clarke, S. A., D. G. Green, J. Joy, K. Wollen, and I. Butler. "Leptidea sinapis (Wood White butterfly) egg-laying habitat and adult dispersal studies in Herefordshire." In Lepidoptera Conservation in a Changing World, 211–23. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-1442-7_20.

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Callaway, Ruth. "Juveniles stick to adults: recruitment of the tube-dwelling polychaete Lanice conchilega (Pallas, 1766)." In Migrations and Dispersal of Marine Organisms, 121–30. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-2276-6_14.

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"Measuring Adult Dispersal." In Mosquito Ecology, 1377–424. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6666-5_15.

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Morgan, Steven G. "Dispersal." In Developmental Biology and Larval Ecology, 383–407. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190648954.003.0014.

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Dispersal of benthic crustaceans primarily occurs by larvae, which can be transported far from parents. However, larval dispersal is reduced by depth regulation in a sheared water column, where surface and bottom currents flow at different rates or directions, and navigation by postlarvae recruiting to adult habitats. Larvae undertake migrations between adult and larval habitats that range from retention near adult habitats to cross-shelf migrations. The extent of these migrations is regulated by depth preferences and vertical migrations that are timed exogenously or endogenously by diel and tidal cycles over planktonic development. Depth regulation is cued primarily by gravity, hydrostatic pressure, and light, and secondarily by temperature, salinity, and turbulence. Settlement stages navigate to suitable settlement sites using hierarchies of acoustic, chemical, visual, and celestial cues that are effective at different distances. The extent of larval migrations between adult and larval habitats as well as diel vertical migrations may be set by the vulnerability of larvae to abundant planktivorous fish in estuaries and nearshore waters. The timing of larval release and vertical swimming by larvae changes across tidal regimes to conserve migrations between adult and larval habitats across species ranges while minimizing predation.
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"Difference approximation for an amphibian juvenile-adult dispersal mode." In Conference Publications 2011. AIMS Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.3934/proc.2011.2011.1.

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DANIEL, M. "SOME QUESTIONS OF THE DISPERSAL OF ADULT TROMBICULID MITES IN THE SOIL." In Proceedings of the First International Congress of Parasitology, 1020–21. Elsevier, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-08-011427-9.50319-x.

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Bauer, Raymond T. "Life Cycle and Seasonal Migrations." In Life Histories, 203–31. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190620271.003.0008.

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Seasonal and life cycle migrations are mass movements in which individuals move horizontally for long distances to encounter favorable conditions for reproduction and development. Such migrations have been best studied in larger mobile decapod crustaceans, many of which are commercially important. Some decapod shrimps and brachyuran crabs are dependent on productive estuaries for completion of life cycles. In these species, planktonic larvae develop in oceanic waters. Postlarval stages utilize currents and appropriate behaviors to enter estuaries via selective tidal stream transport (STST). After growth, juveniles and subadults leave for the adult oceanic habitats, again using STST. Many subtropical and temperate zone neritic species make seasonal offshore migrations into deeper waters during the winter, with return nearshore in the spring; some high latitude species make these migrations but with seasons reversed. Numerous freshwater shrimps are amphidromic, that is, they live and reproduce in streams and rivers, but their planktonic larvae drift or are released directly into the sea for development and dispersal. Postlarvae find the mouths of streams, and then make spectacular mass migrations as juveniles back upstream to the adult habitat. Adults of terrestrial crabs live inland, but brooding females move into the littoral zone during new or full moon periods to hatch out larvae into high amplitude tides that carry the larvae out to sea for development and dispersal.
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10

Maun, M. Anwar. "Seed banks." In The Biology of Coastal Sand Dunes. Oxford University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198570356.003.0009.

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The soil seed bank refers to a reservoir of viable seeds present on the soil surface or buried in the soil. It has the potential to augment or replace adult plants. Such reservoirs have regular inputs and outputs. Outputs are losses of seeds by germination, predation or other causes, while inputs include dispersal of fresh seeds from local sources and immigration from distant sources (Harper 1977). Since sand dunes are dynamic because of erosion, re-arrangement or burial by wind and wave action, efforts to find seed banks have largely been unsuccessful. Following dispersal, seeds accumulate in depressions, in the lee of plants, on sand surfaces, on the base of lee slopes and on the driftline. These seeds are often buried by varying amounts of sand. Buried seeds may subsequently be re-exposed or possibly lost over time. However, the existence of a seed bank can not be denied. Plant species may maintain a transient or a persistent seed bank depending on the longevity of seeds. In species with transient seed banks, all seeds germinate or are lost to other agencies and none is carried over to more than one year. In contrast, in species with a persistent seed bank at least some seeds live for more than one year. The four types of seed banks described by Thompson and Grime (1979) provide useful categories for discussion of coastal seed bank dynamics of different species. Type I species possess a transient seed bank after the maturation and dispersal of their seeds in spring that remain in the seed bank during summer until they germinate in autumn. Type II species possess a transient seed bank during winter but all seeds germinate and colonize vegetation gaps in early spring. Seeds of both types are often but not always dormant and dormancy is usually broken by high temperatures in type I and low temperature in type II. Type III species are annual and perennial herbs in which a certain proportion of seeds enters the persistent seed bank each year, while the remainder germinate soon after dispersal, and Type IV species are annual and perennial herbs and shrubs in which most seeds enter the persistent seed bank and very few germinate after dispersal.
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Conference papers on the topic "Adult dispersal"

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Hood, R. Lyle, Tobias Ecker, John Rossmeisl, John Robertson, and Christopher G. Rylander. "Improving Convection-Enhanced Delivery Through Photothermal Augmentation of Fluid Dispersal." In ASME 2012 Summer Bioengineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/sbc2012-80720.

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Malignant tumors of the central nervous system are the third leading cause of cancer-related deaths in adolescents and adults between the ages of 15 and 34; in children, brain tumors are the leading cause of cancer death. Convection-enhanced delivery (CED) has emerged as a promising method for the transport of high concentrations of chemotherapeutic macromolecules to brain tumors. CED is a minimally-invasive surgical procedure wherein a stereotactically-guided small-caliber catheter is inserted into the brain parenchyma, to a tumor site, for low flowrate infusion of chemotherapy [1]. This direct-delivery method bypasses obstacles to systemic chemotherapy caused by the selective impermeability of the blood-brain barrier. Although preliminary studies were favorable, CED recently failed Phase III FDA trials because clinical goals for tumor regression were not met [2]. This was primarily attributed to insufficient diffuse delivery of the drug throughout tumor masses and their surrounding margins.
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Fritz, Constanza. "Dispersal of codling moth adults within typical agro-ecosystems of central Chile: Relevance of source unmanaged host-plant infestation." In 2016 International Congress of Entomology. Entomological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1603/ice.2016.117468.

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3

Petrentchuk, Lauro William, Jocieli Mileski Bueno, and Thuany Aparecida Lewandoski Jansen. "IDENTIFICAÇÃO E CADASTRAMENTO DE ÁRVORES DA FAMÍLIA MYRTACEAE NA REGIÃO DE CANOINHAS (SC): A OCORRÊNCIA DE CURITIBA PRISMATICA NA FLONA DE TRÊS BARRAS-SC." In I Congresso Nacional On-line de Conservação e Educação Ambiental. Revista Multidisciplinar de Educação e Meio Ambiente, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.51189/rema/1712.

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Introdução: Mirtáceas compreendem um grupo com cerca de 140 gêneros ocorrendo em toda América do Sul. Algumas espécies representantes desta família possuem ocorrência característica nas matas de pinhais. Objetivo: A diversidade de representantes da família myrtaceae é grande e que muitas espécies desta família possuem apelo comercial, realizou-se a identificação e o cadastramento e árvores matrizes da família myrtaceae com potencial de produção de sementes e mudas na região de Canoinhas-SC. Material e métodos: As coletas de informações a campo ocorreram em fragmentos florestais nativos na região de Canoinhas onde localiza-se também a FLONA de Três Barras-SC. As informações coletadas a campo ocorreram semanalmente de março a junho de 2021. Através de formulário específico, coletou-se informações sobre as árvores (diâmetro, espécie, estado fitossanitário, presença de flores, frutos, etc.). Com auxílio de GPS efetuou-se a marcação de cada indivíduo, e posteriormente realizado o processamento Google Earth e em planilha Excel para compor um cadastro e mapeamento da ocorrência destas matrizes. Resultados: Na FLONA contatou-se pouca ocorrência de Eugenia uniflora e Eugenia pyriformis e praticamente a ausência de Campomanesia xanthocarpa, porém uma grande ocorrência natural de Curitiba prismática. A densidade observada em um fragmento florestal, é de cerca de 4 indivíduos a cada 10m², observada em uma parcela de 400m². Algumas árvores apresentam porte adulto, podendo serem utilizadas como matrizes, tendo em vista que a frutificação e dispersão de sementes mostra-se bem evidente dentro da floresta. Conclusão: Até o presente momento, que houveram poucas matrizes localizadas e cadastradas de outras myrtaceaes. O que é perceptível na FLONA é a grande ocorrência de Curitiba prismatica, e que nos fragmentos estudados na região como um todo, existem grande quantidade de indivíduos desta espécie, porém em sua grande maioria ainda em fase jovem e não reprodutiva, limitando a indicação como matrizes. Assim sendo, frente a algumas afirmações aqui expostas de forma breve, vê-se a necessidade de incentivo a continuidade da pesquisa em fragmentos florestais da região para a busca de matrizes para produção de mudas.
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Reports on the topic "Adult dispersal"

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Nathan, Harms, and Cronin James. Variability in weed biological control : effects of foliar nitrogen on larval development and dispersal of the alligatorweed flea beetle, Agasicles hygrophila. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), September 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/41886.

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Host quality can have dramatic effects on performance of biological control agents but its importance is understudied. We used a combination of field measurements and laboratory experiments to determine the range of foliar nitrogen (FN) that larvae of the alligatorweed flea beetle (Agasicles hygrophila) are exposed to in the field and its importance to larval development and dispersal. Seasonal variability in FN was assessed at field sites spanning southern to northern Louisiana every 2–3 weeks during the growing season for four years. In a series of laboratory experiments, alligatorweed FN was manipulated to examine its influence on larval development and survival (under different temperature regimes), adult biomass, and dispersal of the biological control agent, A. hygrophila. Foliar nitrogen and rearing temperature had strong independent effects on larval development rate. We demonstrated that increasing nitrogen in leaf tissues shortens larval A. hygrophila developmental time and increases survival to adulthood, regardless of exposure temperature during development. It also suggests that foliar nitrogen may have important effects on biological control of alligatorweed, particularly as a result of seasonal variation in temperature and plant nutrition at field sites and could contribute to observed variation in A. hygrophila efficacy in the field.
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2

Migration behavior and dispersal of adult spring Chinook salmon released into Lake Scanewa on the upper Cowlitz River during 2005. US Geological Survey, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/70179468.

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