User:Tara K. Luckau/Notebook/Team ConGen/2011/08/12: Difference between revisions

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==Task==
==Meeting with Rulon==
* here
===Committee===
* here
* Andy Bohonak
** in here
* Kathleen Farley
# numbered
** [http://geography.sdsu.edu/People/Faculty/farley.html Department of Geography listing]
# again
** [http://web.me.com/kfwolf/Farley/Home.html Farley's Homepage]
 
 
===SCOC + CNTI/HY===
====existing research====
* VanHoutan 2006,2007 - post-fragmentation levels of vagility may not be the best predictor of how forest fragmentation affects the life history of forest-dependent species
* Callens et al 2011 - post-fragmentation levels of vagility, without reference to past population connectivity, may not be the best predictor of how forest fragmentation affects the life history of forest-dependent species
* Carr and Fahrig 2001 - leopard frog ''Rana pipiens'' (more vagile), green frog ''Rana clamitans'' (less vagile), but similar in demography (clutch size, age class mortality, sexual maturity, decreased larval growth in crowded conditions), thus similar capacity for compensating for increased mortality from road traffic; effect of road traffic on the population abundance; where roads represent a large mortality factor in the matrix, high vagility can place a population at risk.
* Delaney et al 2010 - vulnerability even of species that are perceived to be common and thereby likely less affected by habitat fragmentation. This may be particularly true for low- vagility organisms, and for those with more specific habitat requirements.




===Subsection===
* here





Revision as of 13:53, 12 August 2011

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Meeting with Rulon

Committee


SCOC + CNTI/HY

existing research

  • VanHoutan 2006,2007 - post-fragmentation levels of vagility may not be the best predictor of how forest fragmentation affects the life history of forest-dependent species
  • Callens et al 2011 - post-fragmentation levels of vagility, without reference to past population connectivity, may not be the best predictor of how forest fragmentation affects the life history of forest-dependent species
  • Carr and Fahrig 2001 - leopard frog Rana pipiens (more vagile), green frog Rana clamitans (less vagile), but similar in demography (clutch size, age class mortality, sexual maturity, decreased larval growth in crowded conditions), thus similar capacity for compensating for increased mortality from road traffic; effect of road traffic on the population abundance; where roads represent a large mortality factor in the matrix, high vagility can place a population at risk.
  • Delaney et al 2010 - vulnerability even of species that are perceived to be common and thereby likely less affected by habitat fragmentation. This may be particularly true for low- vagility organisms, and for those with more specific habitat requirements.