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41.
The high degree of physical disturbance associated with conventional response options to oil spills in wetlands is driving
the investigation of alternative cleanup methodologies. In March 1995, a spill of gas condensate in a brackish marsh at Rockefeller
Wildlife Refuge in southwestern Louisiana was remediated through the use of in situ burning. An assessment of vegetation recovery
was initiated in three treatment marshes: (1) oil-impacted and burned, (2) oil impacted and unburned, and (3) a nonoiled unburned
reference. We compared percent cover, stem density, and biomass in the treatment marshes to define ecological recovery of
the marsh vegetation and soil hydrocarbon content to determine the efficacy of in situ burning as a cleanup technique. Burning
led to a rapid decrease in soil hydrocarbon concentrations in the impacted-and-burned marsh to background levels by the end
of the first growing season. Although a management fire accidentally burned the oil-impacted-and-unburned and reference marshes
in December 1995, stem density, live biomass, and total percent cover values in the oil-impacted-and-burned marsh were equivalent
to those in the other treatment marshes after three years. In addition, plant community composition within the oil-impacted-and-burned
marsh was similar to the codominant mix of the grasses Distichlis spicata (salt grass) and Spartina patens (wire grass) characteristic of the surrounding marsh after the same time period. Rapid recovery of the oil-impacted-and-unburned
marsh was likely due to lower initial hydrocarbon exposure. Water levels inundating the soil surface of this grass-dominated
marsh and the timing of the in situ burn early in the growing season were important factors contributing to the rapid recovery
of this wetland. The results of this in situ burn evaluation support the conclusion that burning, under the proper conditions,
can be relied upon as an effective cleanup response to hydrocarbon spills in herbaceous wetlands. 相似文献
42.
Burger J Leschine TM Greenberg M Karr JR Gochfeld M Powers CW 《Environmental management》2003,31(2):0157-0167
More than 50 years of research, development, manufacture, and testing of nuclear weapons at Department of Energy (DOE) sites
has left a legacy of on-site contamination that often spreads to surrounding areas. Despite substantial cleanup budgets in
the last decade, the DOE's top-to-bottom review team concluded that relatively little actual cleanup has been accomplished,
although milestones have been met and work packages completed. Rather than solely use regulatory constraints to direct cleanup,
many people have suggested that human and ecological health should guide long-term stewardship goals of DOE-managed sites.
The main questions are how ecological and human health considerations should be applied in deciding the extent of cleanup
that contaminated sites should receive and how near-term and longer run considerations of costs and benefits should be balanced
as cleanup decisions are made. One effort to protect ecological integrity is the designation of the largest sites as National
Environmental Research Parks (NERPs). Recently, the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) suggested isolating and conserving
DOE sites as a policy priority because of their rich ecological diversity. A more effective long-term stewardship approach
for former nuclear weapons complex sites may emerge if the guiding principles are to (1) reduce risks to human and ecological
health, (2) protect cultural traditions, and (3) lower short- and long-term cleanup and remediation costs. A “net benefits”
perspective that takes both near- and longer-term costs and consequences into account can help illuminate the trade-offs between
expensive cleanup in the near term and the need to assure long-term protection of human health, cultural values, and high
levels of biodiversity and ecological integrity that currently exist at many DOE sites. 相似文献
43.
Infectious Diseases and Extinction Risk in Wild Mammals 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
AMY B. PEDERSEN‡‡ KATE E. JONES§ CHARLES L. NUNN‡ SONIA ALTIZER 《Conservation biology》2007,21(5):1269-1279
Abstract: Parasite-driven declines in wildlife have become increasingly common and can pose significant risks to natural populations. We used the IUCN Red List of Threatened and Endangered Species and compiled data on hosts threatened by infectious disease and their parasites to better understand the role of infectious disease in contemporary host extinctions. The majority of mammal species considered threatened by parasites were either carnivores or artiodactyls, two clades that include the majority of domesticated animals. Parasites affecting host threat status were predominantly viruses and bacteria that infect a wide range of host species, including domesticated animals. Counter to our predictions, parasites transmitted by close contact were more likely to cause extinction risk than those transmitted by other routes. Mammal species threatened by parasites were not better studied for infectious diseases than other threatened mammals and did not have more parasites or differ in four key traits demonstrated to affect parasite species richness in other comparative studies. Our findings underscore the need for better information concerning the distribution and impacts of infectious diseases in populations of endangered mammals. In addition, our results suggest that evolutionary similarity to domesticated animals may be a key factor associated with parasite-mediated declines; thus, efforts to limit contact between domesticated hosts and wildlife could reduce extinction risk. 相似文献
44.
Grasslands, People, and Conservation: Over-the-Horizon Learning Exchanges between African and American Pastoralists 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Abstract: The world's grasslands and large migratory populations of wildlife have been disproportionately lost or disrupted by human activities, yet are poorly represented in protected areas. The major threats they face are land subdivision and the loss of large-scale dynamic processes such as wildlife migrations and fire. The large-scale dynamical processes and ubiquity of livestock economies and cultures across the grasslands calls for an integrated ecosystem approach to conservation to make up the shortfall in protected-area coverage. Ranchers and pastoralists will be more inclined to adopt an integrated landscape approach to conservation if they also see the threats to wildlife and grassland ecosystems as affecting their livelihoods and way of life. We arranged a series of learning exchanges between African and American pastoralists, ranchers, scientists, and conservationists aimed at building the collaboration and consensus needed to conserve grasslands at a landscape level. There was broad agreement on the threat of land fragmentation to livelihoods, wildlife, and grasslands. The exchanges also identified weaknesses in prevailing public, private, and community modes of ownership in halting fragmentation. New collaborative approaches were explored to attain the benefits of privatization while keeping the landscape open. The African–U.S. exchanges showed that learning exchanges can anticipate over-the-horizon problems and speed up the feedback loops that underlie adaptive management and build social and ecological resilience. 相似文献
45.
Payments for Ecosystem Services as a Framework for Community-Based Conservation in Northern Tanzania 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
FRED NELSON CHARLES FOLEY† LARA S. FOLEY† ABRAHAM LEPOSO‡ EDWARD LOURE‡ DAVID PETERSON§ MIKE PETERSON§ THAD PETERSON§ HASSAN SACHEDINA ANDREW WILLIAMS†† 《Conservation biology》2010,24(1):78-85
Abstract: Payments for ecosystem services (PES) are an increasingly promoted approach to conservation. These approaches seek to develop financial mechanisms that create economic incentives for the maintenance of ecosystems and associated biodiversity by rewarding those who are responsible for provision of ecological services. There are, however, few cases in which such schemes have been used as a strategy for conserving wildlife in developing countries and very few operational examples of such schemes of any sort in sub-Saharan Africa. In savannah ecosystems, large mammal populations generally depend on seasonal use of extensive areas and are widely declining as a result of habitat loss, overexploitation, and policies that limit local benefits from wildlife. Community-based conservation strategies seek to create local incentives for conserving wildlife, but often have limited impact as a result of persistent institutional barriers that limit local rights and economic benefits. In northern Tanzania, a consortium of tourism operators is attempting to address these challenges through an agreement with a village that possesses part of a key wildlife dispersal area outside Tarangire National Park. The operators pay the community to enforce voluntary restrictions on agricultural cultivation and permanent settlement in a defined area of land. The initiative represents a potentially cost-effective framework for community-based conservation in an ecologically important area and is helping to reconcile historically conflicting local and national interests relative to land tenure, pastoralist livelihoods, and conservation. Wider adaptation of payments for ecosystem services approaches to settings where sustaining wildlife populations depends on local stewardship may help address current challenges facing conservation outside state-protected areas in savannah ecosystems in sub-Saharan Africa and other parts of the world. 相似文献
46.
MARISKA WEIJERMAN C. MARK EAKIN PAUL MCELHANY MARGARET W. MILLER MATT PATTERSON GREGORY A. PINIAK MATTHEW J. DUNLAP CHARLES BIRKELAND 《Conservation biology》2013,27(6):1169-1178
Many marine invertebrate species facing potential extinction have uncertain taxonomies and poorly known demographic and ecological traits. Uncertainties are compounded when potential extinction drivers are climate and ocean changes whose effects on even widespread and abundant species are only partially understood. The U.S. Endangered Species Act mandates conservation management decisions founded on the extinction risk to species based on the best available science at the time of consideration—requiring prompt action rather than awaiting better information. We developed an expert‐opinion threat‐based approach that entails a structured voting system to assess extinction risk from climate and ocean changes and other threats to 82 coral species for which population status and threat response information was limited. Such methods are urgently needed because constrained budgets and manpower will continue to hinder the availability of desired data for many potentially vulnerable marine species. Significant species‐specific information gaps and uncertainties precluded quantitative assessments of habitat loss or population declines and necessitated increased reliance on demographic characteristics and threat vulnerabilities at genus or family levels. Adapting some methods (e.g., a structured voting system) used during other assessments and developing some new approaches (e.g., integrated assessment of threats and demographic characteristics), we rated the importance of threats contributing to coral extinction risk and assessed those threats against population status and trend information to evaluate each species’ extinction risk over the 21st century. This qualitative assessment resulted in a ranking with an uncertainty range for each species according to their estimated likelihood of extinction. We offer guidance on approaches for future biological extinction risk assessments, especially in cases of data‐limited species likely to be affected by global‐scale threats. Incorporación del Cambio Climático y Oceánico en Estudios de Riesgo de Extinción para 82 Especies de Coral 相似文献
47.
LEELA HAZZAH STEPHANIE DOLRENRY LISA NAUGHTON CHARLES T T EDWARDS OGETO MWEBI FIACHRA KEARNEY LAURENCE FRANK 《Conservation biology》2014,28(3):851-860
Lion (Panthera leo) populations are in decline throughout most of Africa. The problem is particularly acute in southern Kenya, where Maasai pastoralists have been spearing and poisoning lions at a rate that will ensure near term local extinction. We investigated 2 approaches for improving local tolerance of lions: compensation payments for livestock lost to predators and Lion Guardians, which draws on local cultural values and knowledge to mitigate livestock‐carnivore conflict and monitor carnivores. To gauge the overall influence of conservation intervention, we combined both programs into a single conservation treatment variable. Using 8 years of lion killing data, we applied Manski's partial identification approach with bounded assumptions to investigate the effect of conservation treatment on lion killing in 4 contiguous areas. In 3 of the areas, conservation treatment was positively associated with a reduction in lion killing. We then applied a generalized linear model to assess the relative efficacy of the 2 interventions. The model estimated that compensation resulted in an 87–91% drop in the number of lions killed, whereas Lion Guardians (operating in combination with compensation and alone) resulted in a 99% drop in lion killing. Eficacia de Dos Programas de Conservación de Leones en Maasailand, Kenia 相似文献
48.
To ascertain the prevalence and pattern of alcohol impaired driving in an African nation, we conducted a random, roadside, breathalyzer survey of drivers in Ghana. A total of 149 (21%) of 722 drivers tested had a detectable blood alcohol concentration (BAC). In addition, 7.3% of drivers had a BAC ≥ 80 mg/dl. The prevalence of impaired driving (BAC ≥ 80) was higher among private drivers (9.8%) than commercial drivers (6.4%). However, due to a higher volume, the majority (64%) of impaired drivers were commercial drivers. Alcohol use was higher among uneducated (11%) compared to educated drivers (5.4%) and was higher among middle aged drivers (30 - 49 years, 9.1% impaired) compared with younger (< 30 years; 5.0%) or older drivers (≥ 50 years; 0%). Alcohol impaired driving is a significant problem in this African nation. Anti-drunk driving measures should be an important component of road safety efforts. Such measures may need to be different than industrialized nations and will need to target less educated drivers, middle aged drivers, and commercial drivers. 相似文献
49.
The Ecological Future of the North American Bison: Conceiving Long-Term, Large-Scale Conservation of Wildlife 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
ERIC W. SANDERSON KENT H. REDFORD BILL WEBER KEITH AUNE DICK BALDES JOEL BERGER † DAVE CARTER CHARLES CURTIN JAMES DERR STEVE DOBROTT EVA FEARN CRAIG FLEENER STEVE FORREST CRAIG GERLACH C. CORMACK GATES JOHN E. GROSS PETER GOGAN SHAUN GRASSEL JODI A. HILTY MARV JENSEN KYRAN KUNKEL DUANE LAMMERS RURIK LIST KAREN MINKOWSKI TOM OLSON CHRIS PAGUE PAUL B. ROBERTSON BOB STEPHENSON 《Conservation biology》2008,22(2):252-266
Abstract: Many wide-ranging mammal species have experienced significant declines over the last 200 years; restoring these species will require long-term, large-scale recovery efforts. We highlight 5 attributes of a recent range-wide vision-setting exercise for ecological recovery of the North American bison ( Bison bison ) that are broadly applicable to other species and restoration targets. The result of the exercise, the "Vermejo Statement" on bison restoration, is explicitly (1) large scale, (2) long term, (3) inclusive, (4) fulfilling of different values, and (5) ambitious. It reads, in part, "Over the next century, the ecological recovery of the North American bison will occur when multiple large herds move freely across extensive landscapes within all major habitats of their historic range, interacting in ecologically significant ways with the fullest possible set of other native species, and inspiring, sustaining and connecting human cultures." We refined the vision into a scorecard that illustrates how individual bison herds can contribute to the vision. We also developed a set of maps and analyzed the current and potential future distributions of bison on the basis of expert assessment. Although more than 500,000 bison exist in North America today, we estimated they occupy <1% of their historical range and in no place express the full range of ecological and social values of previous times. By formulating an inclusive, affirmative, and specific vision through consultation with a wide range of stakeholders, we hope to provide a foundation for conservation of bison, and other wide-ranging species, over the next 100 years. 相似文献
50.
Information about a nation's mineral resource potential is important in regional and national development planning. Unfortunately, it is usually not possible to determine the optimum levels of investment in mineral resource assessment activities in a developing country. In addition, there is a tendency for governments to initiate expensive resource assessment projects without an understanding of the types of decision that may be influenced by the assessment data. This paper examines ten major policy issues where decisions can be substantially influenced by resource assessment information. Governments can expect to increase their benefits from investment in resource assessment activities by linking resource assessments to specified policy decisions. 相似文献