Loker, Ali
Biodiversity plays a critical role in supporting life in global ecosystems and its links to ecosystem services and sustainability are recognized by scientific and non-scientific communities. Growing awareness of the importance of biodiversity is accelerated by discussions of its loss, and how to design interventions to conserve and mitigate a biodi...
Andrade, Bianca O. Dröse, William Aguiar, Cassiana Alves de Aires, Elisa Teixeira Alvares, Diego Janisch Barbieri, Rosa Lia Carvalho, Claudio José Barros de Bartz, Marie Becker, Fernando Gertum Bencke, Glayson Ariel
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Knowledge on biodiversity is fundamental for conservation strategies. The Brazilian Pampa region, located in subtropical southern Brazil, is neglected in terms of conservation, and knowledge of its biodiversity is fragmented. We aim to answer the question: how many, and which, species occur in the Brazilian Pampa? In a collaborative effort, we buil...
Van Driessche, Charlotte Everts, Teun Neyrinck, Sabrina Halfmaerten, David Haegeman, Annelies Ruttink, Tom Bonte, Dries Brys, Rein
Monitoring fish communities is central to the evaluation of ecological health of rivers. Not only presence/absence of species is important to assess, but also the species composition of local fish assemblages is a crucial parameter. Lotic fish communities are traditionally monitored via electrofishing, characterized by a known limited efficiency an...
Pascoe, Penelope Houghton, Melissa Jones, Holly P. Weldrick, Christine Trebilco, Rowan Shaw, Justine
Seabirds influence island ecosystems through nutrient additions and physical disturbance. These influences can have opposing effects on an island's invertebrate predator populations. Spiders (order: Araneae) are an important predator in many terrestrial island ecosystems, yet little is known about how seabird presence influences spider communities ...
Nagler, Magdalena Podmirseg, Sabine Marie Ascher-Jenull, Judith Sint, Daniela Traugott, Michael
Published in
Molecular ecology resources
The analysis of environmental DNA (eDNA) is revolutionizing the monitoring of biodiversity as it allows to assess organismic diversity at large scale and unprecedented taxonomic detail. However, eDNA consists of an extracellular and intracellular fraction, each characterized by particular properties that determine the retrievable information on whe...
Kaiser, Stefanie Błażewicz, Magdalena Kocot, Kevin M. Leduc, Daniel Riehl, Torben Rouse, Greg W.
Published in
Frontiers in Marine Science
Alcocer, Irene Lima, Herlander Sugai, Larissa Sayuri Moreira Llusia, Diego
Published in
Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
As biodiversity decreases worldwide, the development of effective techniques to track changes in ecological communities becomes an urgent challenge. Together with other emerging methods in ecology, acoustic indices are increasingly being used as novel tools for rapid biodiversity assessment. These indices are based on mathematical formulae that sum...
Douchet, Philippe Boissier, Jérôme Mulero, Stephen Ferté, Hubert Doberva, Margot Allienne, Jean-François Toulza, Eve Bethune, Kévin Rey, Olivier
The world's parasitic and mutualistic biodiversity is undergoing major upheavals related to modifications in host community structures, changes in interactions between species, and through coextinction events. Trematodes are an important component of this invisible biodiversity, in terms of species richness, but also because of their role in ecosys...
Bohmann, Kristine Elbrecht, Vasco Carøe, Christian Bista, Iliana Leese, Florian Bunce, Michael Yu, Douglas W Seymour, Mathew Dumbrell, Alex J Creer, Simon
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Published in
Molecular ecology resources
Metabarcoding of DNA extracted from environmental or bulk specimen samples is increasingly used to profile biota in basic and applied biodiversity research because of its targeted nature that allows sequencing of genetic markers from many samples in parallel. To achieve this, PCR amplification is carried out with primers designed to target a taxono...
Meyer, Erik Fristrup, Kurt Caprio, Anthony C. Seale, L. Don Linares, Carlos McKenna, Megan F.
Published in
Frontiers in Remote Sensing
Forest management strategies that create spatially diverse fire-caused disturbance outcomes, consistent with historic fire regimes, are a desired condition for fire adapted western United States forests. In this context, the temporal dynamics of forest response to fire can inform the tempo and scale of forest management, including prescribed burnin...