Populations and Evolution (q-bio.PE)
Thu, 17 Aug 2023
1.A new multi-metric approach for quantifying global biodiscovery and conservation priorities reveals overlooked hotspots for amphibians
Authors:Sky Button, Amaël Borzée
Abstract: Undocumented species represent one of the largest hurdles for conservation efforts due to the uncertainty they introduce into conservation planning. Until the distribution of earth's biodiversity is better understood, substantial conjecture will continue to be required for protecting species from anthropogenic extinction. Therefore, we developed a novel approach for identifying regions with promising biodiscovery prospects, linked to integrative conservation priorities, which we illustrate using amphibians. Our approach builds on previous estimates of biodiscovery priorities by simultaneously (1) considering linkages between spatio-environmental variables and biodiversity, (2) accounting for the negative relationship between past sampling intensity and future biodiscovery potential, (3) incorporating a priori knowledge about global species distribution patterns, (4) addressing spatial autocorrelation in community composition, and (5) weighting theoretical undocumented species by their predicted levels of conservation need. Using boosted regression trees and 50km^2 map pixels spread across the global range of amphibians, we identified several regions likely to contain many undocumented amphibian species and conservation needs, including the Southeast Asian Archipelago, humid portions of sub-Saharan Africa, and undersampled portions of the Amazon, Andes Mountains, and Central America. We also ranked top-scoring ecoregions by their mean and maximum biodiscovery potential and found that the top-20 ranked ecoregions were most concentrated in the Southeast Asian Archipelago and tropical Africa for undocumented species richness, and in tropical Africa and tropical South America for integrative undocumented amphibian conservation needs. However, high-scoring pixels tended to be widely distributed across different ecoregions for both biodiscovery scoring approaches.
2.A discrete-time dynamical model of prey and stage-structured predator with juvenile hunting incorporating negative effects of prey refuge
Authors:Debasish Bhattacharjee, Nabajit Ray, Dipam Das, Hemanta Kumar Sarmah
Abstract: This paper examines a discrete predator-prey model that incorporates prey refuge and its detrimental impact on the growth of the prey population. Age structure is taken into account for predator species. Furthermore, juvenile hunting as well as prey counter-attack are also considered. This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of the existence and stability conditions pertaining to all possible fixed points. The analytical and numerical investigation into the occurrence of different bifurcations, such as the Neimark-Sacker bifurcation and period-doubling bifurcation, in relation to various parameters is discussed. The impact of the parameters reflecting prey growth and prey refuge is thoroughly addressed. Numerous numerical simulations are presented in order to validate the theoretical findings.