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  • 1
    In: Biomass and Bioenergy, Elsevier BV, Vol. 132 ( 2020-01), p. 105416-
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0961-9534
    Language: English
    Publisher: Elsevier BV
    Publication Date: 2020
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1496404-1
    SSG: 12
    SSG: 23
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  • 2
    In: ARPHA Conference Abstracts, Pensoft Publishers, Vol. 2 ( 2019-06-18)
    Abstract: Because of their monoculture and even-aged plantation character, often highly mechanized harvesting methods and very short rotation cycles for a woody plant crop, the functions of short rotation coppices (SRC) with regard to biodiversity are often thought to be limited. The surprisingly large number studies conducted yielded varying, in some aspects inconclusive results. Most studies and reviews conducted so far concluded that only SRC in the establishment phase after planting are of particular value for biodiversity and nature conservation. In order to achieve a better understanding of biodiversity functions of SRC with the potential to be generalized, we conducted a meta study combining existing ground beetle data from 14 projects with a total of 73 plots from SRC in West Central Europe (Germany) and Czechia. The results show that SRC not only have benefits for biodiversity by providing endangered pioneer species an ephemeral pioneer habitat (particularly during the establishment phase of the SRC), but also do so at the fringes like their edges and in clearings where trees failed to properly establish. A second function for biodiversity conservation is that of providing strict forest species of limited dispersal ability with habitat corridors, which is the case particularly in older, long-existing SRC. The age of the plantation is much more important for this funtion than the length of the rotation intervals. The two conservation benefits which SRC can have are completely different, but can complement each other. In multifunctional landscapes which aim to maintain open field biodiversity and cultivate forest biodiversity at the same time, a stronger consideration of SRC need not be a threat but can be a valuable ingredient in the land use mix.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2603-3925
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Pensoft Publishers
    Publication Date: 2019
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  • 3
    In: Ecological Solutions and Evidence, Wiley, Vol. 2, No. 1 ( 2021-01)
    Abstract: 1. Massenvermehrungen des Schwammspinners verursachen schwere Entlaubungen in holarktischen Wäldern, sowohl in Nordamerika als invasive Art als auch in ihrem natürlichen Verbreitungsgebiet in Eurasien. Eine Entlaubung kann die Holzproduktion beeinträchtigen und sich auf ökologische Gemeinschaften und Prozesse auswirken. Um ökonomische Schäden zu mindern, werden in Massenvermehrungsgebieten regelmäßig Insektizide mittels Luftfahrzeugen ausgebracht. Diese Einsätze können teuer sein und sich schädlich auf Nichtzielorganismen und Interaktionsnetzwerke von Arten auswirken. Allerdings gibt es nur wenige replizierte Studien, die relative Einflüsse von Schwammspinnerausbrüchen und der damit verbundenen Insektizidbehandlung auf Waldwachstum und Tiergemeinschaften untersuchen. Auch im natürlichen Verbreitungsgebiet der Art stehen entsprechende Untersuchungen noch aus. 2. Wir geben hier einen Überblick, auf welchen Wegen die Massenvermehrung des Schwammspinners und dessen chemische Bekämpfung Waldökosysteme beeinflusst. Anschließend stellen wir einen experimentellen Versuchsaufbau vor, der Anfang 2019 in Süd‐ und Mitteldeutschland etabliert wurde und darauf abzielt, die ökologischen und ökonomischen Konsequenzen der Schwammspinnerausbrüche und der Insektizidbehandlung in Eichenwäldern zu untersuchen. Das vollfaktorielle Design der Studie umfasst 12 experimentelle Versuchsflächen aus Waldbeständen mit hohem und niedrigem Entlaubungsrisiko, die entweder mit Tebufenozid behandelt wurden oder unbehandelt blieben. Waldwachstum und –struktur, Baumsterblichkeit, Schwammspinnerdichte sowie die Gemeinschaftsstruktur von Schmetterlingen, Vögeln, Fledermäusen, Laufkäfern und Arthropoden der Baumkronen werden über mehrere Jahre aufgenommen. 3. Ein Jahr intensives Monitoring der Schwammspinnerpopulation und der Schäden in den ausgewählten Versuchsflächen zeigten einen substanziellen Unterschied der Populationsdichte zwischen Flächen mit hohem und niedrigem Entlaubungsrisiko und eine hohe Wirksamkeit von Tebufenozid beim Unterdrücken der Schwammspinnerpopulation in behandelten Flächen. Im ersten Untersuchungsjahr unterschieden sich Schwammspinnerdichte und Entlaubung in prognostizierten Ausbruchsflächen stark, was die Wichtigkeit von vielen Replikaten und Blöcken bestätigt, um räumliche Heterogenität auszugleichen. Das Experiment wird kontinuierlich während der kommenden Jahre durchgeführt, um kurzfristige als auch mittelfristige ökonomische und ökologische Daten zu generieren, die zur Verbesserung unseres Verständnisses und des Managements von Schwammspinnerausbrüchen beitragen werden.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2688-8319 , 2688-8319
    URL: Issue
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 3021448-8
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Acta Zoologica Hungarica ; 2020
    In:  Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae Vol. 66, No. Suppl. ( 2020-12-28), p. 147-168
    In: Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae, Acta Zoologica Hungarica, Vol. 66, No. Suppl. ( 2020-12-28), p. 147-168
    Abstract: The Carabus subgenus Hygrocarabus contains two taxa: C. variolosus and C. nodulosus, the species or subspecies status of which is handled far from uniform in the literature. Both taxa show a similar morphology, the shape of the tip of the aedeagus provides a reliable morphological marker for identification. We analysed two mitochondrial gene parts (COI-5’ and COI-3’) and a nuclear one (ITS2). High diversity was found showing specific geographical patterns. Introgressive hybridisation was detected but interpreted not as an argument for subspecies status because high genetic distances indicated that it must have taken place in former times. In a laboratory hybridisation experiment, the male did not accept the female of the other taxon, supporting the conclusion that these are separate species. A series of refuges was expected for the period of ice ages. Although only the taxon C. variolosus is listed in Annex II and IV of the EU Habitats Directive, C. nodulosus also falls under this listing, as at the time of including the species into the Annexes in 2004, the two taxa were considered subspecies and hence the listing would include both, independent of later taxonomic revisions.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2064-2474 , 1217-8837
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Acta Zoologica Hungarica
    Publication Date: 2020
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2236735-4
    SSG: 12
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Biology Centre, AS CR ; 2014
    In:  European Journal of Entomology Vol. 111, No. 1 ( 2014-1-9), p. 35-49
    In: European Journal of Entomology, Biology Centre, AS CR, Vol. 111, No. 1 ( 2014-1-9), p. 35-49
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1210-5759 , 1802-8829
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Biology Centre, AS CR
    Publication Date: 2014
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2176324-0
    SSG: 12
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  • 6
    In: ARPHA Conference Abstracts, Pensoft Publishers, Vol. 2 ( 2019-06-18)
    Abstract: We studied the effects of global warming and rising temperatures on the ground beetle fauna of Bavarian beech forests using the space for time approach (false time series), and did so in two projects, at two geographical scales: firstly, a Bavarian-wide gradient of 50 plots in beech forests, and second a regional gradient in the Bavarian Forest in the mountains in eastern Bavaria consisting of 48 plots, which was not restricted to beech forests but also included subalpine spruce forests. For purposes of validation, we used as a backdrop data from 413 additional plots all across Bavaria from a wide range of forest habitats. We found five species that would be favoured and six species that would be disadvantaged by rising temperatures in beech forests. For another five species the conditions within the gradient studied reach both their minimum and their maximum temperatures. As a consequence of increasing temperatures there will be winners and losers in these forests and the species composition of ground beetle communities will change. Approximately the same number of species is likely to profit as will be affected negatively. However, when considering the “global responsibility species” for Germany, the balance is negative. It is imporant to note that species may react differently in different habitats and at different regional scales. Some species migtht be more endangered in a local gradient than in a regional gradient, and vice versa, and examples are provided for this. Climate effects proven for a certain habitat must not be the same for other habitats even within the same region if these were not included in the study design. These limitations must be taken into consideration when applying the results of such studies and especially when generalizing them. The benefits of a true time series compared to the popular "false time serices" provided by an elevational gradient are also highlighted using some examples.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2603-3925
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Pensoft Publishers
    Publication Date: 2019
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Pensoft Publishers ; 2019
    In:  ARPHA Conference Abstracts Vol. 2 ( 2019-06-18)
    In: ARPHA Conference Abstracts, Pensoft Publishers, Vol. 2 ( 2019-06-18)
    Abstract: A new understanding of ”characteristic species“ according to the Habitats Directive is presented, including a suggested definition from a scientific point of view and practical implementation. The Habitats Directive includes the mandatory evaluation criterion “characteristic species”. Although obligatory, it has largely been neglected and applied inconsistently. Reasons are the undefined character of the term and very different attempts for its interpretation. In several cases, particularly from the field of carabidology, maximum fidelity of the species has been suggested as the best criterion for defining characteristic species. In other words, the species must not occur in any other habitat type, but should be restricted intirely to the habitat it is characteristic for. As a result, for many habitats there are no, or at best very few characteristic species if this definition is strictly applied, and in many cases no characteristic species could be found even in very well-devolped and large-enough sites where the habitat occurs. Here, a completely different definiton is presented. Exclusive fidelity is decidedly not required, since this criterion aims at defining character species, which by definition serve a different purpose, which is defining a habitat, not characterizing its conservation status. The set of characteristic species of a habitat should be defined based on their statistically confirmed affinity to the habitat and an affinity or fidelity to at least one key habitat factor of the habitat type concerned. Such a key factor could be wetness in the case of wetlands, or peaty soil for bog habitats, or scree for ravines, etc. The application of characteristic species in practice, like in the mandatory assessment of projects and plans under article 6 of the habitats directive should primarily focus on the effects of the plan or purpose to be assessed. Out of the pool of characteristic species of a given habitat, those species which depend on the relevant key factors of the habitat which are possibly altered by the project or plan to be assessed can be selected and their well-being evaluated or monitored. In a second application, which is that for management of a site (also under article 6), the degree of completeness of the pool of characteristic species allows the evaluation of the conservation status. Important conclusions as to which key factors might be lacking or are in an insufficient stage can be drawn from the characteristic species missing at a given site. This can be a property related to habitat tradition, size of the habitat, isolation or certain traits of the soil or the stand types to be evaluated, depending on the particular species and their statistically proven requirements.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2603-3925
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Pensoft Publishers
    Publication Date: 2019
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Pensoft Publishers ; 2019
    In:  ARPHA Conference Abstracts Vol. 2 ( 2019-06-18)
    In: ARPHA Conference Abstracts, Pensoft Publishers, Vol. 2 ( 2019-06-18)
    Abstract: Starting point of this study was the problem considering the status of Carabus variolous and C. nodulosus : French and some German authors classified them as species, most German authors as subspecies and Casale as semispecies. We performed analyses of mitochondrial genes (COI-5', COI-3', ND5) as well as nuclear ones (ITS2, wingless) and analysed the DNA sequences using Seqotron, CLUSTALX (editing and alignment), MEGA, DNAML, SplitsTree (phylogeny and network), 4SALE (compensatory base changes), and BEAST (coalescence). We could study specimens from all regions except the western most part of the distribution area (Massif Central and French Jura, France). The mitochondrial DNA data resulted in a geographic pattern of high diversity within both taxa indicating a series of glacial refuges. In addition, a considerably large area was found were introgressive hybridisation took place in the past - at least two times by nodulosus of different regions into variolosus. The nuclear DNA data show a clear and constant difference between both taxa. In consequence, this complex of forms may be characterised as semispecies from an evolutionary viewpoint but taxonomically as one species because of hybridisation and the lack of compensatory bases changes.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2603-3925
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Pensoft Publishers
    Publication Date: 2019
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Pensoft Publishers ; 2019
    In:  ARPHA Conference Abstracts Vol. 2 ( 2019-06-18)
    In: ARPHA Conference Abstracts, Pensoft Publishers, Vol. 2 ( 2019-06-18)
    Abstract: Peatland species are endangered because of peat extraction and drenching of peatland in many regions, and thus are of great conservation concern. Often times, the trait of being "tyrphobiontic" or "tyrphopilous" is defined differently in the literature, yielding ambigous results. Frequently, studies of peatland fauna do not clearly define which species are characteristic of peatlands, instead focussing on other traits like red data book status etc. The group of peatland specialists should be definied by their affinity to the habitat trait of peaty soil. For many species, further factors are also relevant, like habitat tradition, elevation and regional climate, vegetation types etc., but peaty soil is a common denominator. The "Bavarian bog species basket" lists all species from different species groups that are bog species, grouping them into three clearly defined categories of peatland affinity. For carabids, a list of all 26 species in that basked is presented, and examples provided how these differ in their affinity to different bog habitats, and to bog habitats overall.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2603-3925
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Pensoft Publishers
    Publication Date: 2019
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