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- ecology (3) (entfernen)
The spatio-temporal changes of rangelands in the European Mediterranean are analysed with remote sensing and GIS-based methods, referring to an example of two mountain ranges in central Crete, Greece. The focus is to monitor and assess land degradation and its potential correlation with ecological and socio-economic boundary conditions. Particular attention is paid to the unique European Mediterranean setting and the Greek integration within the European Union. After a geometric correction of the satellite data, a radiometric pre-processing chain is employed to calculate reflectance values via a DEM-based atmospheric correction. The computation of pixel-wise soil and vegetation fractions is based on a spectral unmixing approach. A subsequent time-series analysis reveals spatially explicit trends, mean vegetation cover and phenological variability. Results do not only exhibit significant differences between the two test sites, but also within the respective regions. In both mountain ranges there extended areas with degrading vegetation patterns are revealed. However, along the Southern Cretan coast those processes are bound to a much lower base level of vegetation cover. Beyond trends and mean vegetation abundance, the phenological variability is another important figure which is employed to characterise plant communities from space. Moreover, a satellite-based map of soil development proves the correspondence between soil and vegetation degradation processes. Vegetation cover and change are then analysed with regard to aspect, slope, elevation and geological substrate to allow for a comparison of degradation processes and natural boundary conditions. In a second step, the analyses are extended to find interrelationships with socio-economic determinants. Based on these results the degradation risk for the grazing habitats of central Crete is assessed in differentiated ways. We neither encounter the scenario of irreversible degraded rangelands, nor a cultural landscape in an equilibrium under intense human influence.
Die Fauna-Flora-Habitat-Richtlinie (Richtlinie 92/43/EWG) stellt derzeit das umfangreichste Instrument des internationalen Naturschutzes zur Erhaltung der europäischen Biodiversität dar. Das Grundkonzept der FFH-RL beruht hierbei sowohl auf dem Schutz gefährdeter Arten als auch auf dem Erhalt natürlicher Lebensräume. Dieser ganzheitliche Ansatz verursacht jedoch infolge der großen Anzahl zu berücksichtigender Schutzgüter einen hohen personellen wie finanziellen Aufwand bei der Umsetzung der Richtlinienvorgaben. Daher wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit am Beispiel der Schmetterlingsart Euphydryas aurinia (Anhang II FFH-RL) überprüft, inwieweit die Konzepte von ESUs (Evolutionarily Significant Units) und MUs (Management Units) geeignete Möglichkeiten bieten, um die Prioritätensetzung bei der Auswahl besonders schützenswerter Vorkommen gefährdeter Arten zu erleichtern. Zu diesem Zweck wurden mit drei verschiedenen Subspezies von E. aurinia (E. aurinia beckeri, E. aurinia debilis, E. aurinia aurinia) Fang-Markierung-Wiederfangstudien durchgeführt, sowie mit Hilfe von Allozym-Elektrophoresen populationsgenetische Parametern in europäischem Kontext und auf regionaler Ebene (Westtschechien) erfasst. Die drei untersuchten Subspezies zeigten hierbei spezifische ökologische Adaptationen an die jeweiligen Habitatbedingungen (z.B. bzgl. der Populationsdichte, Demographie und Mobilität). Ferner wiesen die genetischen Analysen starke Differenzierungen bei E. aurinia in Europa nach, die u.a. Antworten auf phylogeographische und taxonomische Fragestellungen ermöglichen. Auch auf regionaler Ebene (Westtschechien) konnten genetische Differenzierungen festgestellt werden. Auf Basis der erhobenen populationsökologischen und -genetischen Daten wird abschließend die generelle Anwendbarkeit und der Nutzen der Konzepte von ESUs und MUs bei der Etablierung von Schutzkonzepten für E. aurinia und andere Arten der FFH-RL diskutiert. rnDer zweite Teil der vorliegenden Arbeit beschäftigt sich exemplarisch mit dem aktuellen Schutzverfahren für deutsche E. aurinia-Vorkommen im Rahmen der FFH-RL und den damit verbundenen Problemen. Der Schwerpunkt lag hierbei auf der Schutzgebietsauswahl, dem Monitoring und dem Gebietsmanagement. In diesem Kontext werden u.a. Problematiken angesprochen, die sich aus der großen ökologischen Variabilität der Art ergeben bzw. die aufgrund von Koordinierungsschwierigkeiten zwischen einzelnen Bundesländern bestehen. Vor dem Hintergrund dieser Erkenntnisse werden Lösungsvorschläge unterbreitet, wie das aktuelle Schutzverfahren für E. aurinia in Deutschland weiter verbessert werden könnte.
This thesis is focused on improving the knowledge on a group of threatened species, the European cave salamanders (genus Hydromantes). There are three main sections gathering studies dealing with different topics: Ecology (first part), Life traits (second part) and Monitoring methodologies (third part). First part starts with the study of the response of Hydromantes to the variation of climatic conditions, analysing 15 different localities throughout a full year (CHAPTER I; published in PEERJ in August 2015). After that, the focus moves on identify which is the operative temperature that these salamander experience, including how their body respond to variation of environmental temperature. This study was conducted using one of the most advanced tool, an infrared thermocamera, which gave the opportunity to perform detailed observation on salamanders body (CHAPTER II; published in JOURNAL OF THERMAL BIOLOGY in June 2016). In the next chapter we use the previous results to analyse the ecological niche of all eight Hydromantes species. The study mostly underlines the mismatch between macro- and microscale analysis of ecological niche, showing a weak conservatism of ecological niches within the evolution of species (CHAPTER III; unpublished manuscript). We then focus only on hybrids, which occur within the natural distribution of mainland species. Here, we analyse if the ecological niche of hybrids shows divergences from those of parental species, thus evaluating the power of hybrids adaptation (CHAPTER IV; unpublished manuscript). Considering that hybrids may represent a potential threat for parental species (in terms of genetic erosion and competition), we produced the first ecological study on an allochthonous mixed population of Hydromantes, analysing population structure, ecological requirements and diet. The interest on this particular population mostly comes by the fact that its members are coming from all three mainland Hydromantes species, and thus it may represent a potential source of new hybrids (CHAPTER V; accepted in AMPHIBIA-REPTILIA in October 2017). The focus than moves on how bioclimatic parameters affect species within their distributional range. Using as model species the microendemic H. flavus, we analyse the relationship between environmental suitability and local abundance of the species, also focusing on all intermediate dynamics which provide useful information on spatial variation of individual fitness (CHAPTER VI; submitted to SCIENTIFIC REPORTS in November 2017). The first part ends with an analysis of the interaction between Hydromantes and Batracobdella algira leeches, the only known ectoparasite for European cave salamanders. Considering that the effect of leeches on their hosts is potentially detrimental, we investigated if these ectoparasites may represent a further threat for Hydromantes (CHAPTER VII; submitted to INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR PARASITOLOGY: PARASITES AND WILDLIFE in November 2017). The second part is related to the reproduction of Hydromantes. In the first study we perform analyses on the breeding behaviour of several females belonging to a single population, identifying differences and similarities occurring in cohorting females (CHAPTER VIII; published in NORTH-WESTERN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY in December 2015). In the second study we gather information from all Hydromantes species, analysing size and development of breeding females, and identifying a relationship between breeding time and climatic conditions (CHAPTER IX; submitted to SALAMANDRA in June 2017). In the last part of this thesis, we analyse two potential methods for monitoring Hydromantes populations. In the first study we evaluate the efficiency of the marking method involving Alpha tags (CHAPTER X; published in SALAMANDRA in October 2017). In the second study we focus on evaluating N-mixtures models as a methodology for estimating abundance in wild populations (CHAPTER XI; submitted to BIODIVERSITY & CONSERVATION in October 2017).