Biosphere

Entries categorized as ‘Ecology’

The Singapore Red Data Book

January 19, 2009 · Leave a Comment

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After the first edition in June 1994, the second version of the list of endangered plants and animals in Singapore was finally published in Nov 2008.

This version boasts new color images and of course updates since 1994.

Available at Nature’s Niche

Reports and updates from various sources:
From Wildshores.blogspot.com by Ria Tan
Ria Tan’s Wildshores Blog on changes in the redlist.

An introduction to what the red list is used for

The report of the launch itself.

Marine life on the red list.

Keynote speech by Dr Tommy Tan on the launch of the Red Data Book

The Singapore Red Data Book
Threatened Plants & Animals of Singapore
G.W.H. Davison, P.K.L. Ng and H.C. Ho
2008, Paperback, 286 pages
ISBN 9810802004

Categories: Conservation · Ecology

The future of food

October 24, 2008 · Leave a Comment

An excellent summary of what the food situation will look like by WIRED magazine.

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Categories: Biotechnolgy · Conservation · Ecology

The freshwater crisis

July 29, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Confronting A World Freshwater Crisis

A good special report by Scientific American. I always felt that water will one day be like oil and be a source of conflict between nations.

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Categories: Conservation · Ecology

Good research on predator prey relationship

July 29, 2008 · Leave a Comment

This Scientific American article is a good illustration of predator prey relationships based on a research on the wolf and moose.

The Wolf and the Moose: Natural Enemies That Need Each Other
Landmark project celebrates 50 years of tracking wolves and moose on a protected archipelago in Michigan’s Lake Superior
By Adam Hadhazy

On a secluded island in Lake Superior, captive wolf packs and moose populations depend on one another for survival: The moose are the wolves’ chief nutritional source, and the wolves, in turn, help keep the moose population in check. But when the wolves eat too many moose, the resulting food shortage pares down the former’s number, controlling their population, as well.

And for the past five decades, scientists have watched this ecological dance in an effort to better understand the predator–prey relationship.

Teams of scientists from Michigan Technological University led by wildlife ecologist Rolf Peterson since 1975, and joined in 2000 by John Vucetich, assistant professor of forest resources and environmental science, have carefully monitored the waxing and waning of these animal populations. The link between hunter and hunted has revealed the species’ interdependency, as well as their shared vulnerability to the isle’s often-tough living conditions. The plant-eating moose must scrounge during the harsh winters to avoid starvation, living on pine needles and twigs. When food becomes too scarce and the moose populations decline, some of the wolves that rely on the moose also die out.

Scientists have found that there are currently four packs of wolves roaming the isle that continually battle for turf and food—and their rise and fall, as described by the researchers, can often stem from seemingly insignificant events.

For example, in January 2000 researchers watched as a lone female wolf entered the territory of one of the wolf bands they had dubbed the Middle Pack. She was attacked by the wolf pack and forced into the chilly water of Lake Superior. Though wounded, she swam back to shore and survived. A male split from the Middle Pack and came to her aid, staying with her and licking her wounds after she had been left for dead. The ostracized couple later mated, founding what became the Chippewa Harbor Pack, a group that has since conquered territory in the Middle Pack’s dwindling empire.

Though the scientists don’t know if such individual and pack behavior is a common occurrence, observations like these on Isle Royale provide insight into how animal societies function as well as the vicissitudes of the food chain cycle on Isle Royale, also helping to inform other models of the natural world.

Researchers have studied the predator–prey dynamics on Isle Royale since 1958, making the project the longest-running of its kind. The Lake Superior archipelago was declared a U.S. National Park in 1940, and this designation saved the remaining wilderness from further logging and mining. The dwindling animal populations rebounded as human industry receded, and the periodic fluctuation of wolf and moose numbers began anew, continuing to this day.

The Isle Royale Wolf/Moose Study celebrates its 50th anniversary in late July. Groups such as the National Park Service and the Earthwatch Institute, among others, help fund the research led by the Michigan Tech faculty.

Categories: Ecology

Mutualism – Boxing Crab

July 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Categories: Conservation · Ecology

Of elephants and acacia

January 20, 2008 · 2 Comments

Interesting story in ecology by Scientific American

Of Ants, Elephants and Acacias: A Tale of Ironic Interdependence
Without large grazing herbivores to eat them, acacia trees suffer because of a shift in the ant populations they house
By David Biello

Acacia trees are the iconic shrub of the East African savanna. Their thorny thickets house a host of creatures and provide sustenance to the local charismatic megafauna, from elephants to zebras. In light of this continual foraging, the plants have struck a mutually beneficial bargain with several species of ants. The insect armies swarm intrusive browsers in exchange for housing and food. But according to new research in Science, it appears that without such browsing—a state of affairs the acacia might be thought to long for—the trees suffer.

Zoologist Todd Palmer and his colleagues examined the interdependence of one such acacia species—the whistling thorn tree, Acacia drepanolobium—the ants it hosts and the herbivores that eat it. He compared six such trees in Kenya that have been surrounded by an electrified fence since 1995 (by entomologist Truman Young of the University of California, Davis) with six trees open to local giraffes, elephants and other acacia-eaters.

In the absence of herbivores, the whistling acacia stopped producing little ant houses in hollow thorns—known as domatia—and excreting the sweet nectar that its bodyguard ants eat. But instead of spurring more growth, the acacias found themselves more than twice as likely to be providing a home to another type of ant—Crematogaster sjostedti—which do not defend the trees and rely on invasions of the bark-boring cerambycid beetle larvae to build the holes in which they dwell. “The cavity-nesting antagonistic ants actually promote the activities of the stem-boring beetle,” says biologist Robert Pringle of Stanford University.

This, in turn, stunts the trees’ growth and causes them to die twice as often than when they are being regularly eaten by giraffes, elephants and other large African herbivores. “The trees are actually making a shortsighted decision by defaulting on their end of the mutualism bargain,” Pringle says. “If they sustained production of ant rewards in the absence of large mammals, they would reduce their probability of being taken over by this somewhat nasty antagonistic ant.”

This counterintuitive result may apply only to the whistling thorn acacia, one of the only species of that genus in Africa that relies on ants as bodyguards rather than thorns and / or chemical defenses. After all, in the wake of disappearing large mammals across Africa, these other types of acacia have proliferated, says ecologist Jacob Goheen of the University of British Columbia.

But it does provide an example of how the disappearance or extinction of elephants, giraffes, zebras and other large herbivores in a region can have unexpected and unintended consequences—much like the boom in leaf-eating beetles and the lizards that prey on them shown in earlier work—whereas the decline of such mammals continues nearly continent-wide through the loss of habitat and overhunting.

“Large herbivores are tremendously important players in these systems,” Pringle says. “Not just because of the direct effects they have upon plants, but also because of the myriad effects they exert on smaller, less conspicuous components of biodiversity.” For want of an elephant, a protective ant species diminished and left the whistling thorn acacia in dire straits.

Categories: Conservation · Ecology

Comparative Guide to Mangroves

September 26, 2007 · Leave a Comment

A comparative guide to mangroves by Dr Jean Yong, NIE.
Comparative Guide to Mangroves

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Categories: Conservation · Ecology · Field studies · Teaching

Resources on Forest Fragmentation

September 25, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Fragmentation and species loss -

http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/99/1/263

http://scitizen.com/screens/blogPage/viewBlog/sw_viewBlog.php?idTheme=22&idContribution=265

http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/100/24/14069.pdf

Categories: Conservation · Ecology · Field studies