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Auteur Raphaël Arlettaz |
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Impact of outdoor winter sports on the abundance of a key indicator species of alpine ecosystems / Patrick Patthey in Journal of applied ecology, 45 ([01/01/2008])
[article]
Titre : Impact of outdoor winter sports on the abundance of a key indicator species of alpine ecosystems Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Patrick Patthey ; Sven Wirthner ; Natalina Signorell ; Raphaël Arlettaz Année de publication : 2008 Article en page(s) : 1704-1711 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Impact sur les paysages
[CBNPMP-Thématique] Sports et activités de pleine natureNote de contenu : Sommaire : 1.Tourism and leisure activities have increased continuously all over the world during the pastdecades, exerting a growing pressure upon naturally fragile ecosystems, such as mountainoushabitats. Recent studies have established that disturbance by outdoor winter sports (e.g. skiing,snowboarding and snowshoeing) is a source of stress for wildlife. This may in turn affect itsabundance, but we still lack quantitative evidence.2.Wetested the effect of outdoor winter sports (ski lifts and related recreational activities) on theabundance of the alpine black grouse Tetrao tetrix, a vulnerable indicator species of the timberlineecosystem, the favoured habitat for outdoor winter sports in the European Alps.3.Generalized linear models and a model selection approach were used to rank environmentalfactors influencing black grouse abundance and to make predictions about population status in thetheoretical absence of ski resorts. We modelled the number of displaying cocks along censustransects in spring, as a function of habitat characteristics (vegetation structure and typology),ski lift density and hunting pressure at 15 natural sites (none or a very low level of anthropogenicdisturbance) and 15 ski resorts in the south-western Swiss Alps.4.Ski lift density and habitat typology were the principal determinants of black grouse abundance,whereas hunting pressure had no discernable effect. Ski lifts and related winter sport activitieshad a strong negative effect on the number of displaying cocks, which may have led to a mean 36%reduction of local abundance in ski lift areas, as determined after controlling for the confoundingeffect of habitat type.5.Synthesis and applications. Conservation action plans for black grouse should aim at reducingthe multiple negative effects generated by outdoor winter sports (ski facilities and related wintersport activities). First, vegetation patchiness (i.e. a mosaic of grassy shrubland with scattered trees)should be maintained along ski runs. Secondly, wintering preserves where human access is bannedor strictly limited should be promoted within ski resorts. Spatially explicit human–wildlife conflictmaps can be constructed from the present model to allow delineation of those areas likely to becomeeffective protection areas. Lien pérenne : DOI : 10.1111/j.1365-2664.2008.01547.x Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=148161
in Journal of applied ecology > 45 [01/01/2008] . - 1704-1711Patthey, Patrick, Wirthner, Sven, Signorell, Natalina, Arlettaz, Raphaël 2008 Impact of outdoor winter sports on the abundance of a key indicator species of alpine ecosystems. Journal of applied ecology, 45: 1704-1711.Documents numériques
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[article]
Titre : Monitoring Butterfly Abundance: Beyond Pollard Walks Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Jérôme Pellet ; Jason T. Bried ; David Parietti ; Antoine Gander ; Patrick O. Heer ; Daniel Cherix ; Raphaël Arlettaz Année de publication : 2012 Article en page(s) : e41396 Langues : Français (fre) Résumé : Most butterfly monitoring protocols rely on counts along transects (Pollard walks) to generate species abundance indices and track population trends. It is still too often ignored that a population count results from two processes: the biological process (true abundance) and the statistical process (our ability to properly quantify abundance). Because individual detectability tends to vary in space (e.g., among sites) and time (e.g., among years), it remains unclear whether index counts truly reflect population sizes and trends. This study compares capture-mark-recapture (absolute abundance) and count-index (relative abundance) monitoring methods in three species (Maculinea nausithous and Iolana iolas: Lycaenidae; Minois dryas: Satyridae) in contrasted habitat types. We demonstrate that intraspecific variability in individual detectability under standard monitoring conditions is probably the rule rather than the exception, which questions the reliability of count-based indices to estimate and compare specific population abundance. Our results suggest that the accuracy of count-based methods depends heavily on the ecology and behavior of the target species, as well as on the type of habitat in which surveys take place. Monitoring programs designed to assess the abundance and trends in butterfly populations should incorporate a measure of detectability. We discuss the relative advantages and inconveniences of current monitoring methods and analytical approaches with respect to the characteristics of the species under scrutiny and resources availability. Lien pérenne : DOI : 10.1371/journal.pone.0041396 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=147098
in PloS ONE > 7 (7) (2012) . - e41396Pellet, Jérôme, Bried, Jason T., Parietti, David, Gander, Antoine, Heer, Patrick O., Cherix, Daniel, Arlettaz, Raphaël 2012 Monitoring Butterfly Abundance: Beyond Pollard Walks. PloS ONE, 7(7): e41396.Documents numériques
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