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1.
Conserv Biol ; 36(4): e13892, 2022 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35171538

RESUMO

Conservation translocation is a common method for species recovery, for which one increasingly frequent objective is restoring lost ecological functions to promote ecosystem recovery. However, few conservation translocation programs explicitly state or monitor function as an objective, limiting the ability to test assumptions, learn from past efforts, and improve management. We evaluated whether translocations of hihi (Notiomystis cincta), a threatened New Zealand passerine, achieved their implicit objective of restoring lost pollination function. Through a pollinator-exclusion experiment, we quantified, with log response ratios (lnR), the effects of birds on fruit set and seed quality in hangehange (Geniostoma ligustrifolium), a native flowering shrub. We isolated the contributions of hihi by making comparisons across sites with and without hihi. Birds improved fruit set more at sites without hihi (lnR = 1.27) than sites with hihi (lnR = 0.50), suggesting other avian pollinators compensated for and even exceeded hihi contributions to fruit set. Although birds improved seed germination only at hihi sites (lnR = 0.22-0.41), plants at sites without hihi had germination rates similar to hihi sites because they produced 26% more filled seeds, regardless of pollination condition. Therefore, although our results showed hihi improved seed quality, they also highlighted the complexity of ecological functions. When an important species is lost, ecosystems may be able to achieve similar function through different means. Our results underscore the importance of stating and monitoring the ecological benefits of conservation translocations when functional restoration is a motivation to ensure these programs are achieving their objectives.


Evaluación del Éxito de la Restauración Funcional Posterior a la Reintroducción de un Ave Polinizadora Desaparecida Resumen La reubicación para la conservación es un método común para la recuperación de especies en el cual un objetivo cada vez más frecuente es la restauración de las funciones ecológicas que se perdieron para promover la recuperación del ecosistema. Sin embargo, pocos programas de reubicación para la conservación establecen o monitorean explícitamente a la función como un objetivo, lo que limita la posibilidad de comprobar suposiciones, aprender de esfuerzos anteriores y mejorar la gestión. Analizamos si las reubicaciones de hihi (Notiomystis cincta), un ave paseriforme amenazada de Nueva Zelanda, lograron el objetivo implícito de restaurar la desaparecida función de polinización. Mediante un experimento de exclusión del polinizador, cuantificamos con relaciones de respuesta logarítmica (lnR) los efectos de las aves sobre el conjunto de frutos y la calidad de la semilla del arbusto floral nativo Geniostoma ligustrifolium. Aislamos las contribuciones del hihi cuando comparamos entre sitios con y sin su presencia. Las aves favorecieron más al conjunto de frutos en sitios sin hihi (lnR = 1.27) que en los sitios con hihi (lnR = 0.50), lo que sugiere que otras aves polinizadoras compensaron y excedieron las contribuciones del hihi al conjunto de frutos. Aunque las aves aumentaron la germinación de semillas sólo en sitios con hihi (lnR = 0.22-0.41), las plantas en los sitios sin hihi tuvieron tasas de germinación similares a los sitios con hihi porque produjeron 26% más de semillas completas sin importar la condición de la polinización. Por lo tanto, aunque nuestros resultados mostraron mejoras en la calidad de la semilla a causa del hihi, también resaltaron la complejidad de las funciones ecológicas. Cuando desaparece una especie importante, puede que los ecosistemas logren una función similar por medio de diferentes métodos. Nuestros resultados hacen hincapié en la importancia que tiene establecer y monitorear los beneficios ecológicos de las reubicaciones para la conservación cuando la restauración es motivo para asegurar que estos programas están logrando sus objetivos.


Assuntos
Aves , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Ecossistema , Polinização , Animais , Nova Zelândia , Plantas
2.
Ann Bot ; 116(5): 833-43, 2015 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26229065

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Interactions between species are especially sensitive to environmental changes. The interaction between plants and pollinators is of particular interest given the potential current global decline in pollinators. Reduced pollinator services can be compensated for in some plant species by self-pollination. However, if inbreeding depression is high, selfed progeny could die prior to reaching adulthood, leading to cryptic recruitment failure. METHODS: To examine this scenario, pollinator abundance, pollen limitation, selfing rates and inbreeding depression were examined in 12 populations of varying disturbance levels in Sophora microphylla (Fabaceae), an endemic New Zealand tree species. KEY RESULTS: High pollen limitation was found in all populations (average of 58 % reduction in seed production, nine populations), together with high selfing rates (61 % of offspring selfed, six populations) and high inbreeding depression (selfed offspring 86 % less fit, six populations). Pollen limitation was associated with lower visitation rates by the two endemic bird pollinators. CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest that for these populations, over half of the seeds produced are genetically doomed. This reduction in the fitness of progeny due to reduced pollinator service is probably important to population dynamics of other New Zealand species. More broadly, the results suggest that measures of seed production or seedling densities may be a gross overestimate of the effective offspring production. This could lead to cryptic recruitment failure, i.e. a decline in successful reproduction despite high progeny production. Given the global extent of pollinator declines, cryptic recruitment failure may be widespread.


Assuntos
Endogamia , Polinização , Sophora/fisiologia , Nova Zelândia , Dinâmica Populacional , Autofertilização , Sophora/genética
3.
Nat Ecol Evol ; 7(11): 1834-1843, 2023 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37679456

RESUMO

Virus transmission between host species underpins disease emergence. Both host phylogenetic relatedness and aspects of their ecology, such as species interactions and predator-prey relationships, may govern rates and patterns of cross-species virus transmission and hence zoonotic risk. To address the impact of host phylogeny and ecology on virus diversity and evolution, we characterized the virome structure of a relatively isolated island ecological community in Fiordland, New Zealand, that are linked through a food web. We show that phylogenetic barriers that inhibited cross-species virus transmission occurred at the level of host phyla (between the Chordata, Arthropoda and Streptophyta) as well as at lower taxonomic levels. By contrast, host ecology, manifest as predator-prey interactions and diet, had a smaller influence on virome composition, especially at higher taxonomic levels. The virus-host community comprised a 'small world' network, in which hosts with a high diversity of viruses were more likely to acquire new viruses, and generalist viruses that infect multiple hosts were more likely to infect additional species compared to host specialist viruses. Such a highly connected ecological community increases the likelihood of cross-species virus transmission, particularly among closely related species, and suggests that host generalist viruses present the greatest risk of disease emergence.


Assuntos
Ecologia , Ecossistema , Filogenia , Especificidade de Hospedeiro , Nova Zelândia
4.
Nature ; 437(7062): 1107, 2005 Oct 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16237434

RESUMO

A single Norway rat released on to a rat-free island was not caught for more than four months, despite intensive efforts to trap it. The rat first explored the 9.5-hectare island and then swam 400 metres across open water to another rat-free island, evading capture for 18 weeks until an aggressive combination of detection and trapping methods were deployed simultaneously. The exceptional difficulty of this capture indicates that methods normally used to eradicate rats in dense populations are unlikely to be effective on small numbers, a finding that could have global implications for conservation on protected islands.


Assuntos
Geografia , Locomoção/fisiologia , Ratos/fisiologia , Sistemas de Identificação Animal , Animais , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Nova Zelândia , Natação/fisiologia
5.
Gigascience ; 4: 46, 2015.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26445670

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: There is an increasing demand for rapid biodiversity assessment tools that have a broad taxonomic coverage. Here we evaluate a suite of environmental DNA (eDNA) markers coupled with next generation sequencing (NGS) that span the tree of life, comparing them with traditional biodiversity monitoring tools within ten 20×20 meter plots along a 700 meter elevational gradient. RESULTS: From six eDNA datasets (one from each of 16S, 18S, ITS, trnL and two from COI) we identified sequences from 109 NCBI taxonomy-defined phyla or equivalent, ranging from 31 to 60 for a given eDNA marker. Estimates of alpha and gamma diversity were sensitive to the number of sequence reads, whereas beta diversity estimates were less sensitive. The average within-plot beta diversity was lower than between plots for all markers. The soil beta diversity of COI and 18S markers showed the strongest response to the elevational variation of the eDNA markers (COI: r=0.49, p<0.001; 18S: r=0.48, p<0.001). Furthermore pairwise beta diversities for these two markers were strongly correlated with those calculated from traditional vegetation and invertebrate biodiversity measures. CONCLUSIONS: Using a soil-based eDNA approach, we demonstrate that standard phylogenetic markers are capable of recovering sequences from a broad diversity of eukaryotes, in addition to prokaryotes by 16S. The COI and 18S eDNA markers are the best proxies for aboveground biodiversity based on the high correlation between the pairwise beta diversities of these markers and those obtained using traditional methods.


Assuntos
Biodiversidade , DNA/genética , Família Multigênica , Animais
6.
Science ; 331(6020): 1068-71, 2011 Feb 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21292938

RESUMO

Reductions in bird numbers could hamper ecosystem services such as pollination, but experimental proof is lacking. We show that functional extinction of bird pollinators has reduced pollination, seed production, and plant density in the shrub Rhabdothamnus solandri (Gesneriaceae) on the North Island ("mainland") of New Zealand but not on three nearby island bird sanctuaries where birds remain abundant. Pollen limitation of fruit set is strong [pollen limitation index (PLI) = 0.69] and significant on the mainland but small (PLI = 0.15) and nonsignificant on islands. Seed production per flower on the mainland is reduced 84%. Mainland sites have similar adult densities, but 55% fewer juvenile plants per adult, than island sites. Seed addition experiments near adult R. solandri plants on the mainland found strong seed limitation 5 years after sowing for R. solandri but not for two other co-occurring woody species. This demonstrates a terrestrial trophic cascade.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Magnoliopsida/fisiologia , Passeriformes , Polinização , Animais , Extinção Biológica , Flores , Frutas/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Magnoliopsida/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Nova Zelândia , Dinâmica Populacional , Dispersão de Sementes , Sementes , Árvores
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