Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"ITS" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Contrasting microbial assembly patterns in the woody endosphere of hybrid and non-hybrid em Populus /em trees Grant KR; Kembel SW; Naik S; Dayanandan S; 41089252
BIOLOGY
2 Perceptions et attitudes des personnes âgées souffrant d insomnie par rapport aux médicaments et aux produits de santé naturels Nguyen PV; Dang-Vu T; Forest G; Saidi L; Desmarais P; 40968485
CONCORDIA
3 No species left behind: borrowing strength to map data-deficient species Sharma S; Winner K; Pollock LJ; Thorson JT; Mäkinen J; Merow C; Pedersen EJ; Chefira KF; Portmann JM; Iannarilli F; Beery S; de Lutio R; Jetz W; 40571432
BIOLOGY
4 Widespread admixture blurs population structure and confounds Lake Trout (Salvelinus namaycush) conservation even in the genomic era Bernos TA; Gibelli J; Michaelides S; Won H; Jeon HB; Marin K; Boguski DA; Janjua MY; Gallagher CP; Howland KL; Fraser DJ; 39730611
BIOLOGY
5 Variation in flower morphology associated with higher bee diversity in urban green spaces Sinno S; MacInnis G; Lessard JP; Ziter CD; 39609370
BIOLOGY
6 Electroacupuncture Reduces Heart Rate and Perceived Exertion During a Bike Test: A Preliminary Analysis Gaudet E; Castonguay T; Fortin M; Dover G; 39457342
HKAP
7 Robustness and evolvability: Revisited, redefined and applied Kharma N; Bédard-Couture R; 39098381
ENCS
8 Connectivity of stormwater ponds impacts Odonata abundance and species richness Richmond IC; Perron MC; Boyle SP; Pick FR; 38435963
BIOLOGY
9 Cone allometry and seed protection from fire are similar in serotinous and nonserotinous conifers Greene DF; Kane JM; Pounden E; Michaletz ST; 38375897
BIOLOGY
10 Ecological strategies of (pl)ants: Towards a world-wide worker economic spectrum for ants Gibb H; Bishop TR; Leahy L; Parr CL; Lessard JP; Sanders NJ; Shik JZ; Ibarra-Isassi J; Narendra A; Dunn RR; Wright IJ; 37056633
BIOLOGY
11 Effects of the HEARTY exercise randomized controlled trial on eating behaviors in adolescents with obesity Alberga AS; Edache IY; Sigal RJ; von Ranson KM; Russell-Mayhew S; Kenny GP; Doucette S; Prud' homme D; Hadjiyannakis S; Cameron JD; Goldfield GS; 37034563
HKAP
12 Social cognition and depression in adolescent girls Porter-Vignola E; Booij L; Dansereau-Laberge ÈM; Garel P; Bossé Chartier G; Seni AG; Beauchamp MH; Herba CM; 35738696
PSYCHOLOGY
13 De-stigmatizing the "win-win:" making sustainable consumption sustainable Goldsmith K; Roux C; Tezer A; Cannon C; 35429922
JMSB
14 A Versatile Transcription Factor Biosensor System Responsive to Multiple Aromatic and Indole Inducers Nasr MA; Timmins LR; Martin VJJ; Kwan DH; 35316041
CHEMBIOCHEM
15 Concurrent Validity of the Adult Eating Behavior Questionnaire in a Canadian Sample Cohen TR; Kakinami L; Plourde H; Hunot-Alexander C; Beeken RJ; 34925181
PERFORM
16 Cocaine cue-induced mesocorticolimbic activation in cocaine users: Effects of personality traits, lifetime drug use, and acute stimulant ingestion D' Amour-Horvat V; Cox SML; Dagher A; Kolivakis T; Jaworska N; Leyton M; 34463411
CSBN
17 Defensive Traits during White Spruce (Picea glauca) Leaf Ontogeny Antoine-Olivier Lirette 34357304
BIOLOGY
18 Category-specific verb-semantic deficits in Alzheimer's disease: Evidence from static and dynamic action naming. de Almeida RG, Mobayyen F, Antal C, Kehayia E, Nair VP, Schwartz G 33455543
PSYCHOLOGY
19 Using Models to (Re-)Design Synthetic Circuits. McCallum G, Potvin-Trottier L 33405217
BIOLOGY
20 Temperature drives caste-specific morphological clines in ants. Brassard F, Francoeur A, Lessard JP 32858759
BIOLOGY
21 Volatility spillover around price limits in an emerging market Aktas OU; Kryzanowski L; Zhang J; 32837364
JMSB
22 The interplay of nested biotic interactions and the abiotic environment regulates populations of a hypersymbiont. Mestre A, Poulin R, Holt RD, Barfield M, Clamp JC, Fernandez-Leborans G, Mesquita-Joanes F 31408529
BIOLOGY
23 How spatial heterogeneity shapes multiscale biochemical reaction network dynamics. Pfaffelhuber P, Popovic L 25652460
MATHSTATS
24 Adolescent media use and its association to wellbeing in a Canadian national sample. Fitzpatrick C, Burkhalter R, Asbridge M 31024788
PERFORM

 

Title:Connectivity of stormwater ponds impacts Odonata abundance and species richness
Authors:Richmond ICPerron MCBoyle SPPick FR
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38435963/
DOI:10.1007/s10980-024-01817-z
Publication:Landscape ecology
Keywords:AnisopteraCircuitscapeDispersalFragmentationUrban ecologyZygoptera
PMID:38435963 Category: Date Added:2024-03-04
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Biology, University of Ottawa, 30 Marie Curie Private, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5 Canada.
2 Department of Biology, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke St. W., Montreal, QC H4B 1R6 Canada.
3 St. Lawrence River Institute of Environmental Sciences, 2 St. Lawrence Drive, Cornwall, ON K6H 4Z1 Canada.
4 School of Science and the Environment, Memorial University of Newfoundland - Grenfell, 20 University Dr, Corner Brook, NL A2H 5G5 Canada.

Description:

Context: The successful dispersal of an animal depends, partly, on landscape connectivity. Urbanization poses risks to dispersal activities by increasing hostile land cover types.

Objectives: We investigated how connectivity of urban ponds impacted Odonata communities (dragonflies and damselflies), an order of semi-aquatic insects that actively disperse.

Methods: We sampled 41 constructed stormwater ponds and 8 natural ponds in a metropolitan area. The effect of connectivity and the quantity of available adjacent habitats was tested at different scales for dragonflies (900 m) and damselflies (300 m), determined by a literature analysis, to account for differences in suborder dispersal capabilities.

Results: Lower levels of connectivity and fewer nearest neighbours negatively impacted abundance, species richness, and composition of dragonflies (p values < 0.01, R2 = 0.18-0.70). Adult dragonfly abundance had a stronger positive relationship with connectivity than species richness. In particular, the abundance of adult dragonfly Leucorrhinia frigida, found almost exclusively at natural ponds, had a positive relationship with connectivity. Connectivity and the number of nearest neighbours had no significant impact on damselflies apart from a slight negative relationship between connectivity and species richness (p value = 0.02, R2 = 0.11). Natural ponds had significantly higher levels of connectivity when compared to stormwater ponds.

Conclusions: Our results suggest that dragonflies are positively affected by increased connectivity in an urban landscape, with no benefit of connectivity to damselflies at the scale measured. We recommend intentional planning of urban stormwater pond networks, where individual ponds can act as stepping stones, incorporated with strategic inclusion of beneficial land cover types.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10980-024-01817-z.





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