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  1. Article: Fragment connectivity shapes bird communities through functional trait filtering in two types of grasslands

    Marcolin, Fabio / Lakatos, Tamás / Gallé, Róbert / Batáry, Péter

    Global ecology and conservation. 2021 Aug., v. 28

    2021  

    Abstract: Habitat fragmentation is considered one of the most severe threatening factors for global biodiversity. Here we assessed, how local and landscape scale environmental variables, such as fragment size (small vs. large) and landscape configuration (measured ...

    Abstract Habitat fragmentation is considered one of the most severe threatening factors for global biodiversity. Here we assessed, how local and landscape scale environmental variables, such as fragment size (small vs. large) and landscape configuration (measured as connectivity index) relates to bird community composition, species richness, abundance and functional diversity. We surveyed 60 grassland fragments in Hungary, belonging to two different threatened grassland types, namely forest-steppes and kurgans. Forest-steppes are natural mosaics of grasslands and forests at the contact zone between closed-canopy temperate forests and steppe grasslands. Kurgans are ancient burial mounds, found on the Eurasian steppe and forest steppe zone. These fragments were embedded in plantation forestry, respectively, agricultural matrix with gradients of size and connectivity. Both habitats are threatened by forestry and agricultural intensification, though these fragments may serve as important wildlife refuges. Our findings revealed that forest-steppe birds were more diverse and abundant in large and well-connected than in small isolated fragments. High connectivity affected ground nesting birds in small forest-steppe fragments positively. Birds inhabiting kurgan area showed higher trait similarity in well-connected than in isolated fragments. Bird abundance of kurgans associated with small home range size and ground feeding habit were higher in connected compared to isolated fragments. Highly isolated kurgans filtered for more specialised bird species but not for generalists. We provide conservation implications for enhancing grassland specialist bird communities, which consist of preservation of large, well-connected grassland fragments within production landscapes and through reconsideration of the currently used intensive forestry.
    Keywords birds ; community structure ; forest steppe ; functional diversity ; habitat fragmentation ; home range ; intensive farming ; intensive forestry ; landscapes ; plantation forestry ; species richness ; wildlife ; Hungary
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2021-08
    Publishing place Elsevier B.V.
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2814786-8
    ISSN 2351-9894
    ISSN 2351-9894
    DOI 10.1016/j.gecco.2021.e01687
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  2. Article: Body size and sexual selection shaped the evolution of parrot calls

    Marcolin, Fabio / Cardoso, Gonçalo C. / Bento, Daniel / Reino, Luís / Santana, Joana

    Journal of evolutionary biology. 2022 Mar., v. 35, no. 3

    2022  

    Abstract: Morphology, habitat and various selective pressures (e.g. social and sexual selection) can influence the evolution of acoustic signals, but the relative importance of their effects is not well understood. The order Psittaciformes (parrots, sensu lato) is ...

    Abstract Morphology, habitat and various selective pressures (e.g. social and sexual selection) can influence the evolution of acoustic signals, but the relative importance of their effects is not well understood. The order Psittaciformes (parrots, sensu lato) is a large clade of very vocal and often gregarious species for which large‐scale comparative studies of vocalizations are lacking. We measured acoustic traits (duration, sound frequency, frequency bandwidth and sound entropy) of the predominant call type for >200 parrot species to test: (1) for associations with body size; (2) the acoustic adaptation hypothesis (AAH) (predicting differences between forest and open‐habitat species); (3) the social complexity hypothesis (predicting more complex calls in gregarious species) and (4) influences of sexual selection (predicting correlated evolution with colour ornamentation). Larger species had on average longer calls, lower sound frequency and wider frequency bandwidth. These associations with body size are all predicted by physical principles of sound production. We found no evidence for the acoustic adaptation and social complexity hypotheses, but perhaps social complexity is associated with vocal traits not studied here, such as call repertoire sizes. More sexually dichromatic species had on average simpler calls (shorter, with lower entropy and narrower frequency bandwidth) indicating an influence of sexual selection, namely an evolutionary negative correlation between colour ornamentation and elaborate acoustic signals, as predicted by the transference hypothesis. Our study is the first large‐scale attempt at understanding acoustic diversity across the Psittaciformes, and indicates that body size and sexual selection influenced the evolution of species differences in vocal signals.
    Keywords Psittaciformes ; acoustics ; body size ; color ; entropy ; forests ; habitats ; parrots ; sexual selection
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2022-03
    Size p. 439-450.
    Publishing place John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
    Document type Article
    Note JOURNAL ARTICLE
    ZDB-ID 1465318-7
    ISSN 1420-9101 ; 1010-061X
    ISSN (online) 1420-9101
    ISSN 1010-061X
    DOI 10.1111/jeb.13986
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  3. Article: Human‐induced globalization of insular herpetofaunas

    Capinha, César / Marcolin, Fabio / Reino, Luís

    Global ecology and biogeography. 2020 Aug., v. 29, no. 8

    2020  

    Abstract: AIM: The aim was to document the impact of the globalization of human activity on the biodiversity and biogeographical patterns of reptilian and amphibian faunas across islands worldwide. LOCATION: Islands worldwide. TIME PERIOD: From the 15th century to ...

    Abstract AIM: The aim was to document the impact of the globalization of human activity on the biodiversity and biogeographical patterns of reptilian and amphibian faunas across islands worldwide. LOCATION: Islands worldwide. TIME PERIOD: From the 15th century to the present time. MAJOR TAXA STUDIED: Reptiles and amphibians. METHODS: We compiled lists of the reptilian and amphibian species that occurred on islands before the 15th century and of those that occur currently. For each species group, we calculated differences in species richness and in compositional similarities among islands, between the two periods. Regression models were used: (a) to associate the observed differences with spatial patterns of geographical, climatic, biotic and human factors; and (b) to quantify changes in the relative importance of non‐human factors in explaining the spatial patterns of species richness and compositional similarity. RESULTS: The richness of reptile and amphibian species increased consistently across islands worldwide. Hotspots of increase were detected in the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean. The composition of species assemblages was substantially homogenized; this was particularly true for amphibians within the Caribbean Sea and for reptiles within the Caribbean Sea and Indian Ocean and between the Indian and the Pacific Oceans. Our results showed that spatial patterns of change in species richness and compositional similarity are driven by human and natural factors. The driving role of mean annual temperature is particularly consistent, and current reptile richness and compositional similarity patterns for both species groups are increasingly being shaped by the global temperature gradient. MAIN CONCLUSIONS: The globalization of human activity is eroding the regionalized character of insular herpetofaunas and leading to the emergence of global‐scale gradients of taxonomic composition and species richness. Projections of increasing rates of biological invasions, extinctions and climate change suggest that these changes are likely to be aggravated even further in the coming decades.
    Keywords amphibians ; anthropogenic activities ; climate change ; ecological invasion ; fauna ; geographical distribution ; globalization ; islands ; regression analysis ; reptiles ; species richness ; taxonomy ; temperature ; Caribbean ; Caribbean Sea ; Indian Ocean ; Pacific Ocean
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2020-08
    Size p. 1328-1349.
    Publishing place John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
    Document type Article
    Note JOURNAL ARTICLE
    ZDB-ID 2021283-5
    ISSN 1466-8238 ; 1466-822X ; 0960-7447
    ISSN (online) 1466-8238
    ISSN 1466-822X ; 0960-7447
    DOI 10.1111/geb.13109
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  4. Article ; Online: Body size and sexual selection shaped the evolution of parrot calls.

    Marcolin, Fabio / Cardoso, Gonçalo C / Bento, Daniel / Reino, Luís / Santana, Joana

    Journal of evolutionary biology

    2022  Volume 35, Issue 3, Page(s) 439–450

    Abstract: Morphology, habitat and various selective pressures (e.g. social and sexual selection) can influence the evolution of acoustic signals, but the relative importance of their effects is not well understood. The order Psittaciformes (parrots, sensu lato) is ...

    Abstract Morphology, habitat and various selective pressures (e.g. social and sexual selection) can influence the evolution of acoustic signals, but the relative importance of their effects is not well understood. The order Psittaciformes (parrots, sensu lato) is a large clade of very vocal and often gregarious species for which large-scale comparative studies of vocalizations are lacking. We measured acoustic traits (duration, sound frequency, frequency bandwidth and sound entropy) of the predominant call type for >200 parrot species to test: (1) for associations with body size; (2) the acoustic adaptation hypothesis (AAH) (predicting differences between forest and open-habitat species); (3) the social complexity hypothesis (predicting more complex calls in gregarious species) and (4) influences of sexual selection (predicting correlated evolution with colour ornamentation). Larger species had on average longer calls, lower sound frequency and wider frequency bandwidth. These associations with body size are all predicted by physical principles of sound production. We found no evidence for the acoustic adaptation and social complexity hypotheses, but perhaps social complexity is associated with vocal traits not studied here, such as call repertoire sizes. More sexually dichromatic species had on average simpler calls (shorter, with lower entropy and narrower frequency bandwidth) indicating an influence of sexual selection, namely an evolutionary negative correlation between colour ornamentation and elaborate acoustic signals, as predicted by the transference hypothesis. Our study is the first large-scale attempt at understanding acoustic diversity across the Psittaciformes, and indicates that body size and sexual selection influenced the evolution of species differences in vocal signals.
    MeSH term(s) Acoustics ; Animals ; Body Size ; Parrots ; Sexual Selection ; Vocalization, Animal
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-02-25
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 1465318-7
    ISSN 1420-9101 ; 1010-061X
    ISSN (online) 1420-9101
    ISSN 1010-061X
    DOI 10.1111/jeb.13986
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article ; Online: MAMMALS IN PORTUGAL: A data set of terrestrial, volant, and marine mammal occurrences in Portugal.

    Grilo, Clara / Afonso, Beatriz C / Afonso, Filipe / Alexandre, Marta / Aliácar, Sara / Almeida, Ana / Alonso, Ivan Prego / Álvares, Francisco / Alves, Paulo / Alves, Paulo Célio / Alves, Pedro / Amado, Anabela / Amendoeira, Vitor / Amorim, Francisco / da Silva Aparício, Guilherme / Araújo, Ricardo / Ascensão, Fernando / Augusto, Margarida / Bandeira, Victor /
    Barbosa, A Márcia / Barbosa, Soraia / Barbosa, Sérgio / Barreiro, Silvia / Barros, Paulo / Barros, Tânia / Barros, Filomena / Basto, Mafalda / Bernardino, Joana / Bicho, Sara / Biedma, Luis Eduardo / Borges, Marta / Braz, Luis / Brito, José Carlos / Brito, Tiago / Cabral, João Alexandre / Calzada, Javier / Camarinha, Cláudia / Carapuço, Mafalda / Cardoso, Paulo / Carmo, Mário / Carrapato, Carlos / da Silva Carrilho, Maílis / Carvalho, Diogo Filipe T C S / Carvalho, Filipe / Carvalho, João / Castro, Diana / Castro, Guilherme / Castro, Joana / Castro, Luis Roma / Catry, Filipe Xavier / Cerveira, Ana M / Cid, André / Clarke, Rafael / Conde, Conceição / Conde, José / Costa, Jorge / Costa, Mafalda / Costa, Pedro / Costa, Cristina / do Couto, André Pedro / Craveiro, João / Dias, Marta / Dias, Sofia / Duarte, Beatriz / Duro, Virginia / Encarnação, Cláudia / Eufrázio, Sofia / Fael, António / Falé, João Salvador / Faria, Sandra / Fernandes, Carlos / Fernandes, Margarida / da Costa, Gonçalo Ferrão / Ferreira, Clara / Ferreira, Diogo F / Ferreira, Eduardo / Ferreira, Joaquim Pedro / Ferreira, João / Ferreira, Diana / Fonseca, Carlos / Fontes, Inês / Fragoso, Ricardo / Franco, Claudia / Freitas, Tamira / Gabriel, Sofia I / Gibb, Rory / Gil, Patricia / Gomes, Carla Patricia Jorge / Horta, Pedro / Gomes, Pedro / Gomes, Verónica / Grilo, Filipa / Guedes, Américo / Guilherme, Filipa / Gutiérrez, Iván / Harper, Henry / Herrera, José M / Hipólito, Dário / Infante, Samuel / Jesus, José / Jones, Kate E / Laborde, Marina I / de Oliveira, Luís Lamas / Leitão, Inês / Lemos, Rita / Lima, Cátia / Linck, Paloma / Lopes, Hugo / Lopes, Susana / López-Baucells, Adrià / Loureiro, Armando / Loureiro, Filipa / Lourenço, Rui / Lourenço, Sofia / Lucas, Paula / Magalhães, Ana / Maldonado, Cristina / Marcolin, Fabio / Marques, Sara / Marques, J Tiago / Marques, Carina / Marques, Paulo / Marrecas, Pedro Caetano / Martins, Frederico / Martins, Raquel / Mascarenhas, Miguel / Mata, Vanessa A / Mateus, Ana Rita / Matos, Milene / Medinas, Denis / Mendes, Tiago / Mendes, Gabriel / Mestre, Frederico / Milhinhas, Catarina / Mira, António / Monarca, Rita I / Monteiro, Norberto / Monteiro, Barbara / Monterroso, Pedro / Nakamura, Mónia / Negrões, Nuno / Nóbrega, Eva K / Nóvoa, Miguel / Nunes, Manuel / Nunes, Nuno Jardim / Oliveira, Flávio / Oliveira, José Miguel / Palmeirim, Jorge M / Pargana, João / Paula, Anabela / Paupério, Joana / Pedroso, Nuno M / Pereira, Guilherme / Pereira, Pedro F / Pereira, José / Pereira, Maria João Ramos / Petrucci-Fonseca, Francisco / Pimenta, Miguel / Pinto, Sara / Pinto, Nuno / Pires, Rosa / Pita, Ricardo / Pontes, Carlos / Quaresma, Marisa / Queirós, João / Queirós, Luís / Rainho, Ana / da Graça Ramalhinho, Maria / Ramalho, Patrícia / Raposeira, Helena / Rasteiro, Francisco / Rebelo, Hugo / Regala, Frederico Tátá / Reto, Dyana / Ribeiro, Sérgio Bruno / Rio-Maior, Helena / Rocha, Ricardo / Rocha, Rita Gomes / Rodrigues, Luísa / Román, Jacinto / Roque, Sara / Rosalino, Luís Miguel / do Rosário, Inês T / Rossa, Mariana / Russo, Danilo / Sá, Pedro / Sabino-Marques, Helena / Salgueiro, Vânia / Santos, Helena / Santos, Joana / Santos, João P V / Santos, Nuno / Santos, Sara / Santos, Carlos Pedro / Santos-Reis, Margarida / Serronha, Ana / Sierra, Pablo / Silva, Bruno / Silva, Carla S G M / Silva, Clara / Silva, Diogo / da Silva, Luís P / Silva, Ricardo / Silva, Carmen / da Silva Júnior, Flavio Manoel Rodrigues / Sousa, Pedro / Sousa-Guedes, Diana / Spadoni, Giulia / Tapisso, Joaquim T / Teixeira, Daniela / Teixeira, Sérgio / Teixeira, Nuno / Torres, Rita T / Travassos, Paulo / Vale-Gonçalves, Hélia / Cidraes-Vieira, Nuno / von Merten, Sophie / da Luz Mathias, Maria

    Ecology

    2022  Volume 103, Issue 6, Page(s) e3654

    Abstract: Mammals are threatened worldwide, with ~26% of all species being included in the IUCN threatened categories. This overall pattern is primarily associated with habitat loss or degradation, and human persecution for terrestrial mammals, and pollution, open ...

    Abstract Mammals are threatened worldwide, with ~26% of all species being included in the IUCN threatened categories. This overall pattern is primarily associated with habitat loss or degradation, and human persecution for terrestrial mammals, and pollution, open net fishing, climate change, and prey depletion for marine mammals. Mammals play a key role in maintaining ecosystems functionality and resilience, and therefore information on their distribution is crucial to delineate and support conservation actions. MAMMALS IN PORTUGAL is a publicly available data set compiling unpublished georeferenced occurrence records of 92 terrestrial, volant, and marine mammals in mainland Portugal and archipelagos of the Azores and Madeira that includes 105,026 data entries between 1873 and 2021 (72% of the data occurring in 2000 and 2021). The methods used to collect the data were: live observations/captures (43%), sign surveys (35%), camera trapping (16%), bioacoustics surveys (4%) and radiotracking, and inquiries that represent less than 1% of the records. The data set includes 13 types of records: (1) burrows | soil mounds | tunnel, (2) capture, (3) colony, (4) dead animal | hair | skulls | jaws, (5) genetic confirmation, (6) inquiries, (7) observation of live animal (8), observation in shelters, (9) photo trapping | video, (10) predators diet | pellets | pine cones/nuts, (11) scat | track | ditch, (12) telemetry and (13) vocalization | echolocation. The spatial uncertainty of most records ranges between 0 and 100 m (76%). Rodentia (n =31,573) has the highest number of records followed by Chiroptera (n = 18,857), Carnivora (n = 18,594), Lagomorpha (n = 17,496), Cetartiodactyla (n = 11,568) and Eulipotyphla (n = 7008). The data set includes records of species classified by the IUCN as threatened (e.g., Oryctolagus cuniculus [n = 12,159], Monachus monachus [n = 1,512], and Lynx pardinus [n = 197]). We believe that this data set may stimulate the publication of other European countries data sets that would certainly contribute to ecology and conservation-related research, and therefore assisting on the development of more accurate and tailored conservation management strategies for each species. There are no copyright restrictions; please cite this data paper when the data are used in publications.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Carnivora ; Climate Change ; Ecosystem ; Mammals ; Portugal ; Rabbits ; Rodentia
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-04-12
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2010140-5
    ISSN 1939-9170 ; 0012-9658
    ISSN (online) 1939-9170
    ISSN 0012-9658
    DOI 10.1002/ecy.3654
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Article: MAMMALS IN PORTUGAL: A data set of terrestrial, volant, and marine mammal occurrences in Portugal

    Grilo, Clara / Afonso, Beatriz C. / Afonso, Filipe / Alexandre, Marta / Aliácar, Sara / Almeida, Ana / Alonso, Ivan Prego / Álvares, Francisco / Alves, Paulo / Alves, Paulo Célio / Alves, Pedro / Amado, Anabela / Amendoeira, Vitor / Amorim, Francisco / da Silva Aparício, Guilherme / Araújo, Ricardo / Ascensão, Fernando / Augusto, Margarida / Bandeira, Victor /
    Barbosa, A. Márcia / Barbosa, Soraia / Barbosa, Sérgio / Barreiro, Silvia / Barros, Paulo / Barros, Tânia / Barros, Filomena / Basto, Mafalda / Bernardino, Joana / Bicho, Sara / Biedma, Luis Eduardo / Borges, Marta / Braz, Luis / Brito, José Carlos / Brito, Tiago / Cabral, João Alexandre / Calzada, Javier / Camarinha, Cláudia / Carapuço, Mafalda / Cardoso, Paulo / Carmo, Mário / Carrapato, Carlos / da Silva Carrilho, Maílis / Carvalho, Diogo Filipe T. C. S. / Carvalho, Filipe / Carvalho, João / Castro, Diana / Castro, Guilherme / Castro, Joana / Castro, Luis Roma / Catry, Filipe Xavier / Cerveira, Ana M. / Cid, André / Clarke, Rafael / Conde, Conceição / Conde, José / Costa, Jorge / Costa, Mafalda / Costa, Pedro / Costa, Cristina / do Couto, André Pedro / Craveiro, João / Dias, Marta / Dias, Sofia / Duarte, Beatriz / Duro, Virginia / Encarnação, Cláudia / Eufrázio, Sofia / Fael, António / Falé, João Salvador / Faria, Sandra / Fernandes, Carlos / Fernandes, Margarida / da Costa, Gonçalo Ferrão / Ferreira, Clara / Ferreira, Diogo F. / Ferreira, Eduardo / Ferreira, Joaquim Pedro / Ferreira, João / Ferreira, Diana / Fonseca, Carlos / Fontes, Inês / Fragoso, Ricardo / Franco, Claudia / Freitas, Tamira / Gabriel, Sofia I. / Gibb, Rory / Gil, Patricia / Gomes, Carla Patricia Jorge / Horta, Pedro / Gomes, Pedro / Gomes, Verónica / Grilo, Filipa / Guedes, Américo / Guilherme, Filipa / Gutiérrez, Iván / Harper, Henry / Herrera, José M. / Hipólito, Dário / Infante, Samuel / Jesus, José / Jones, Kate E. / Laborde, Marina I. / de Oliveira, Luís Lamas / Leitão, Inês / Lemos, Rita / Lima, Cátia / Linck, Paloma / Lopes, Hugo / Lopes, Susana / López‐Baucells, Adrià / Loureiro, Armando / Loureiro, Filipa / Lourenço, Rui / Lourenço, Sofia / Lucas, Paula / Magalhães, Ana / Maldonado, Cristina / Marcolin, Fabio / Marques, Sara / Marques, J. Tiago / Marques, Carina / Marques, Paulo / Marrecas, Pedro Caetano / Martins, Frederico / Martins, Raquel / Mascarenhas, Miguel / Mata, Vanessa A. / Mateus, Ana Rita / Matos, Milene / Medinas, Denis / Mendes, Tiago / Mendes, Gabriel / Mestre, Frederico / Milhinhas, Catarina / Mira, António / Monarca, Rita I. / Monteiro, Norberto / Monteiro, Barbara / Monterroso, Pedro / Nakamura, Mónia / Negrões, Nuno / Nóbrega, Eva K. / Nóvoa, Miguel / Nunes, Manuel / Nunes, Nuno Jardim / Oliveira, Flávio / Oliveira, José Miguel / Palmeirim, Jorge M. / Pargana, João / Paula, Anabela / Paupério, Joana / Pedroso, Nuno M. / Pereira, Guilherme / Pereira, Pedro F. / Pereira, José / Pereira, Maria João Ramos / Petrucci‐Fonseca, Francisco / Pimenta, Miguel / Pinto, Sara / Pinto, Nuno / Pires, Rosa / Pita, Ricardo / Pontes, Carlos / Quaresma, Marisa / Queirós, João / Queirós, Luís / Rainho, Ana / da Graça Ramalhinho, Maria / Ramalho, Patrícia / Raposeira, Helena / Rasteiro, Francisco / Rebelo, Hugo / Regala, Frederico Tátá / Reto, Dyana / Ribeiro, Sérgio Bruno / Rio‐Maior, Helena / Rocha, Ricardo / Rocha, Rita Gomes / Rodrigues, Luísa / Román, Jacinto / Roque, Sara / Rosalino, Luís Miguel / do Rosário, Inês T. / Rossa, Mariana / Russo, Danilo / Sá, Pedro / Sabino‐Marques, Helena / Salgueiro, Vânia / Santos, Helena / Santos, Joana / Santos, João P. V. / Santos, Nuno / Santos, Sara / Santos, Carlos Pedro / Santos‐Reis, Margarida / Serronha, Ana / Sierra, Pablo / Silva, Bruno / Silva, Carla S. G. M. / Silva, Clara / Silva, Diogo / da Silva, Luís P. / Silva, Ricardo / Silva, Carmen / da Silva Júnior, Flavio Manoel Rodrigues / Sousa, Pedro / Sousa‐Guedes, Diana / Spadoni, Giulia / Tapisso, Joaquim T. / Teixeira, Daniela / Teixeira, Sérgio / Teixeira, Nuno / Torres, Rita T. / Travassos, Paulo / Vale‐Gonçalves, Hélia / Cidraes‐Vieira, Nuno / von Merten, Sophie / da Luz Mathias, Maria

    Ecology. 2022 June, v. 103, no. 6

    2022  

    Abstract: Mammals are threatened worldwide, with ~26% of all species being included in the IUCN threatened categories. This overall pattern is primarily associated with habitat loss or degradation, and human persecution for terrestrial mammals, and pollution, open ...

    Abstract Mammals are threatened worldwide, with ~26% of all species being included in the IUCN threatened categories. This overall pattern is primarily associated with habitat loss or degradation, and human persecution for terrestrial mammals, and pollution, open net fishing, climate change, and prey depletion for marine mammals. Mammals play a key role in maintaining ecosystems functionality and resilience, and therefore information on their distribution is crucial to delineate and support conservation actions. MAMMALS IN PORTUGAL is a publicly available data set compiling unpublished georeferenced occurrence records of 92 terrestrial, volant, and marine mammals in mainland Portugal and archipelagos of the Azores and Madeira that includes 105,026 data entries between 1873 and 2021 (72% of the data occurring in 2000 and 2021). The methods used to collect the data were: live observations/captures (43%), sign surveys (35%), camera trapping (16%), bioacoustics surveys (4%) and radiotracking, and inquiries that represent less than 1% of the records. The data set includes 13 types of records: (1) burrows | soil mounds | tunnel, (2) capture, (3) colony, (4) dead animal | hair | skulls | jaws, (5) genetic confirmation, (6) inquiries, (7) observation of live animal (8), observation in shelters, (9) photo trapping | video, (10) predators diet | pellets | pine cones/nuts, (11) scat | track | ditch, (12) telemetry and (13) vocalization | echolocation. The spatial uncertainty of most records ranges between 0 and 100 m (76%). Rodentia (n =31,573) has the highest number of records followed by Chiroptera (n = 18,857), Carnivora (n = 18,594), Lagomorpha (n = 17,496), Cetartiodactyla (n = 11,568) and Eulipotyphla (n = 7008). The data set includes records of species classified by the IUCN as threatened (e.g., Oryctolagus cuniculus [n = 12,159], Monachus monachus [n = 1,512], and Lynx pardinus [n = 197]). We believe that this data set may stimulate the publication of other European countries data sets that would certainly contribute to ecology and conservation‐related research, and therefore assisting on the development of more accurate and tailored conservation management strategies for each species. There are no copyright restrictions; please cite this data paper when the data are used in publications.
    Keywords Chiroptera ; Lynx pardinus ; Monachus monachus ; Oryctolagus cuniculus ; Rodentia ; bioacoustics ; cameras ; climate change ; data collection ; dead animals ; diet ; echolocation ; feces ; georeferencing ; habitat destruction ; humans ; marine mammals ; pollution ; soil ; telemetry ; uncertainty ; Azores ; Portugal
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2022-06
    Publishing place John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
    Document type Article
    Note JOURNAL ARTICLE
    ZDB-ID 1797-8
    ISSN 0012-9658
    ISSN 0012-9658
    DOI 10.1002/ecy.3654
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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