The ecological plot: how stories gave rise to a science

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The ecological plot: how stories gave rise to a science

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  • Research Article
  • 10.1016/s1226-8615(08)60219-8
Horizontal and Vertical Distribution of Genus Xanthopimpla (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) in an Ecological Plot of Pasoh Forest Reserve, Malaysia
  • Jun 1, 2004
  • Journal of Asia-Pacific Entomology
  • A.D Gonzaga + 1 more

Horizontal and Vertical Distribution of Genus Xanthopimpla (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) in an Ecological Plot of Pasoh Forest Reserve, Malaysia

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 26
  • 10.1007/s10980-019-00773-3
Application of a dynamic model using agronomic and economic data to evaluate the sustainability of the olive grove landscape of Estepa (Andalusia, Spain)
  • Feb 9, 2019
  • Landscape Ecology
  • A A Rodríguez Sousa + 3 more

In the Andalusia region (Spain), olive grove agro-systems cover a wide area, forming social-ecological landscapes. Recent socioeconomic changes have increased the vulnerability of these landscapes, resulting in the abandonment and intensification of farms. The provision of the main ecosystem services of these landscapes have thus been degraded. To analyse the sustainability of an olive grove social-ecological landscape in Andalusia. Specifically, to develop a quantitative model proposing land planning and management scenarios, considering abandonment, production and economic benefits of olive crops in different conditions of erosion and management. We applied a dynamic model using agronomic and economic data, to evaluate different types of olive management. We considered different levels of erosion, the loss of production related to this erosion, and useful life spans for each type of management. We simulated scenarios for the long-term assessment of dynamics of crops, abandonment rate, production and benefits. (a) There was a loss of productive lands and benefits in the medium term in the more intensive crops. (b) Scenarios that partially incorporated ecological management proved to be more sustainable without economic subsidies. (c) The spatial combination of integrated, intensive and ecological plots was sustainable, and was well balanced from an economic, productive and ecological point of view. Scenarios that partially incorporate ecological management allowed the best economic and environmental balance. However, to ensure the sustainability of olive landscapes, farmers should be financially rewarded for their role in the conservation of ecosystem services through landscape stewardship and direct environmental payments.

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  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 8
  • 10.1186/s13021-014-0009-y
A wood density and aboveground biomass variability assessment using pre-felling inventory data in Costa Rica
  • Sep 17, 2014
  • Carbon Balance and Management
  • Sienna Svob + 2 more

BackgroundThe high spatio-temporal variability of aboveground biomass (AGB) in tropical forests is a large source of uncertainty in forest carbon stock estimation. Due to their spatial distribution and sampling intensity, pre-felling inventories are a potential source of ground level data that could help reduce this uncertainty at larger spatial scales. Further, exploring the factors known to influence tropical forest biomass, such as wood density and large tree density, will improve our knowledge of biomass distribution across tropical regions. Here, we evaluate (1) the variability of wood density and (2) the variability of AGB across five ecosystems of Costa Rica.ResultsUsing forest management (pre-felling) inventories we found that, of the regions studied, Huetar Norte had the highest mean wood density of trees with a diameter at breast height (DBH) greater than or equal to 30 cm, 0.623 ± 0.182 g cm-3 (mean ± standard deviation). Although the greatest wood density was observed in Huetar Norte, the highest mean estimated AGB (EAGB) of trees with a DBH greater than or equal to 30 cm was observed in Osa peninsula (173.47 ± 60.23 Mg ha-1). The density of large trees explained approximately 50% of EAGB variability across the five ecosystems studied. Comparing our study's EAGB to published estimates reveals that, in the regions of Costa Rica where AGB has been previously sampled, our forest management data produced similar values.ConclusionsThis study presents the most spatially rich analysis of ground level AGB data in Costa Rica to date. Using forest management data, we found that EAGB within and among five Costa Rican ecosystems is highly variable. Combining commercial logging inventories with ecological plots will provide a more representative ground level dataset for the calibration of the models and remotely sensed data used to EAGB at regional and national scales. Additionally, because the non-protected areas of the tropics offer the greatest opportunity to reduce rates of deforestation and forest degradation, logging inventories offer a promising source of data to support mechanisms such as the United Nations REDD + (Reducing Emissions from Tropical Deforestation and Degradation) program.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13021-014-0009-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

  • Research Article
  • 10.32840/2522-4263/2023-1-7
ВЗАЄМОЗВ’ЯЗОК ІННОВАЦІЙНОГО ТА СОЦІАЛЬНО-ЕТИЧНОГО МАРКЕТИНГІВ ЯК ДЖЕРЕЛА ФОРМУВАННЯ КОНКУРЕНТНИХ ПЕРЕВАГ
  • Jan 1, 2023
  • Pryazovskyi Economic Herald
  • Olena Shumkova + 2 more

The article examines the issue of using the concepts of innovative marketing and social-ethical marketing as related elements to increase the competitiveness of the enterprise. The purpose of the article is to study the possibility of combining the concepts of innovative marketing and socio-ethical marketing for the formation of sustainable competitive advantages of enterprises on domestic and global markets. The authors identified the main trends in consumer behavior in 2023 according to the report of the research company Euromonitor International and the possibility of using these trends for the implementation of innovative activities of the enterprise. It has been established that the needs of modern consumers are based on the principles of sustainable development and social responsibility. The main features of innovative marketing and socio-ethical marketing in terms of marketing complexes are established and synergistic connections between the two concepts are proposed. Also, as an idea for the development of the farm, the fragmentation of sown areas into ecological plots was proposed, where measures to improve the component qualities of products will be maximally observed. The authors proposed innovative steps of the company’s activity using the principles of social and ethical marketing. On the example of the farm company “Batkivshchyna” of the Krasnopilska community of the Sumy region, the possibility of combining the principles of innovative and socio-ethical marketing in its activities was considered. In the study, the authors proposed the production of pellets to improve the innovative and ecological indicators of the area of the Krasnopilska community and provide the population with energy resources for heating. The authors determined the amount of expenses for the farm to purchase equipment and the level of profitability of the activity of producing the pellets. It was determined that the introduction of innovation into the company’s activities will create certain positive social effects in the future, which will lead to the improvement of the economic condition of business and the development of the territorial community.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 20
  • 10.1016/j.foreco.2004.07.050
The effects of the timing and method of logging on forest structure in Peninsular Malaysia
  • Sep 29, 2004
  • Forest Ecology and Management
  • Ho Wei Seng + 3 more

The effects of the timing and method of logging on forest structure in Peninsular Malaysia

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 98
  • 10.1007/s11027-010-9217-2
Ecological impacts and management strategies for western larch in the face of climate-change
  • Mar 1, 2010
  • Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change
  • Gerald E Rehfeldt + 1 more

Approximately 185,000 forest inventory and ecological plots from both USA and Canada were used to predict the contemporary distribution of western larch (Larix occidentalis Nutt.) from climate variables. The random forests algorithm, using an 8-variable model, produced an overall error rate of about 2.9 %, nearly all of which consisted of predicting presence at locations where the species was absent. Genetic variation among 143 populations within western larch’s natural distribution was predicted from multiple regression models using variables describing the climate of the seed source as predictors and response data from two separate genetic tests: 1) 15-year height at a field site in British Columbia, Canada, and, 2) two principal components of 8 variables describing growth, disease tolerance, and phenology of 6-year-old trees in a test in Idaho, USA. Presence and absence of the species and genetic variation within the species were projected into future climates provided by three General Circulation Models and two scenarios. Although the projections described pronounced impacts on the species and its populations, concurrence among the six projections pinpointed areas where the probability would be high that the future climate would be suitable for western larch. Concurrence among projections also was used to locate those sources of seed that should be best attuned genetically to future climates. The procedures outline a logical approach for developing management strategies for accommodating climate-change while taking into account the variability imposed by the differences among climatic estimates.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1086/736772
:The Ecological Plot: How Stories Gave Rise to a Science
  • Jun 10, 2025
  • Modern Philology
  • Pramod K Nayar

:<i>The Ecological Plot: How Stories Gave Rise to a Science</i>

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.1088/2515-7620/ad091b
Study on spatiotemporal changes and influencing factors of frozen soil moisture during freeze-thaw period under different ecological construction measures in the loess plateau of China
  • Nov 1, 2023
  • Environmental Research Communications
  • Shengdong Cheng + 5 more

The climatic conditions and soil characteristics of the Loess Plateau in China make it have a unique freeze–thaw process and the distribution of soil unfrozen water. In order to elucidate the spatio-temporal variation of soil unfrozen water during freeze–thaw period and its influencing factors under different ecological construction measures, The spatial and temporal variation of soil unfrozen moisture and its main influencing factors in five different ecological plots in the Loess Plateau during freeze–thaw period were studied by combining field monitoring and indoor calculation. The results showed that: (1) the spatiotemporal changes of unfrozen water content in soil were different under different vegetation restoration methods. The variation of unfrozen water content in fallow land was the largest at 20cm depth, while the variation in surface 10cm was the largest in the other four plots. (2) The average unfrozen water content of soil in the representative soil layer can be estimated more accurately, and the best representative soil layer in the five sample plots is concentrated in 20–30 cm. (3) During seasonal freeze–thaw period, the main controlling environmental factors of unfrozen water content are air temperature and surface temperature. The results can provide reference for soil protection and water resources management in northwest China, especially in the Loess Plateau.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1088/1755-1315/549/1/012037
Preliminary Study on Tree Species Composition, Diversity and Biomass of Dipterocarpus and Hopea genera of Bukit Bakar Forest Eco Park, Machang, Kelantan
  • Aug 1, 2020
  • IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science
  • Nurafiqah Zafriakma + 6 more

A study on species composition, diversity and biomass of genera Dipterocarpus and Hopea at Bukit Bakar Forest Eco Park, Machang, Kelantan was conducted. A total of 5 ecological plots with measurement of 20 m x 20 m were established. All trees with diameter at breast height (dbh) less than 5.0 cm were tagged, measured and collected for specimen identifications and voucher specimen’s preparations. The floristic composition of Bukit Bakar Eco Park consists of 135 individuals represented by 1 family, 2 genera and 17 species. The most abundance species recorded was Dipterocarpus crinitus Dyer with 23 individuals were recorded. Dipterocarpus crinitus (Dipterocarpaceae) was the most important species according to Important Value index (IVi) calculated at IVi = 17.73%. Dipterocarpaceae was the most high species diversity according to Shannon Wiener Index, H’=2.02 (H’ max =2.30) for Dipterocarpus spp. and H’=1.90 (H’ max =1.94) for Hopea spp. and Simpson’s Index of Diversity for Dipterocarpus spp. is 0.85 and 0.86 for Hopea spp.. Whilst Hopea had a slightly higher Species Evenness Index (EH=0.98) compared to Dipterocarpus (EH=0.87). Total tree biomass estimation in the study area was at 145.18 t/ha.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 68
  • 10.1002/ajp.20617
Test of the ecological‐constraints model on ursine colobus monkeys (Colobus vellerosus) in Ghana
  • Sep 30, 2008
  • American Journal of Primatology
  • Julie A Teichroeb + 1 more

For group-living mammals, the ecological-constraints model predicts that within-group feeding competition will increase as group size increases, necessitating more daily travel to find food and thereby constraining group size. It provides a useful tool for detecting scramble competition any time it is difficult to determine whether or not food is limiting. We tested the ecological-constraints model on highly folivorous ursine colobus monkeys (Colobus vellerosus) at the Boabeng-Fiema Monkey Sanctuary in Ghana. Three differently sized groups were followed for 13 months and two others were followed for 6 months each in 2004-2005 using focal-animal sampling and ranging scans; ecological plots and phenology surveys were used to determine home-range quality and food availability. There was relatively little difference in home-range quality, monthly food availability, diet, adult female ingestion rates, and rate of travel within food patches between the groups. However, home-range size, day-range length, and percent of time spent feeding all increased with group size. We performed a single large test of the ecological-constraints model by combining several separate Spearman correlations, each testing different predictions under the model, using Fisher's log-likelihood method. It showed that the ecological-constraints model was supported in this study; scramble competition in this population is manifesting in increased ranging and time spent feeding. How costly this increased energy expenditure is for individuals in larger groups remains to be determined.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1093/ywcct/mbaf010
Science and Medicine
  • Oct 10, 2025
  • The Year's Work in Critical and Cultural Theory
  • Leah Benedict + 1 more

In this year’s review, we provide an analysis of works that explore narrowly defined topics to extraordinary effect. The sections are divided both thematically and by authorship. In the first two sections, Leah Benedict highlights works that grapple with the transitory and the minuscule: the operations of gestation and fetal life, and the ubiquity and ephemerality of motion in Caroline Arni’s Of Human Born: Fetal Lives, 1800–1950 and Janina Wellmann’s Biological Motion: A History of Life, respectively. In the third and fourth sections, Anna K. Sagal reviews two works that position the study of water beside the science of ecology to explore the mutualistic exchanges occurring between those seemingly distinct fields, showing how Victorian narrative structures and techniques of signification informed the material studies of their era: Ursula Kluwick’s Haunting Ecologies: Victorian Conceptions of Water and John MacNeill Miller’s The Ecological Plot: How Stories Gave Rise to a Science.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 3
  • 10.1007/s10745-019-00103-w
Evidence and Ecology of Historic Human Settlements in Kibale National Park, Uganda
  • Aug 23, 2019
  • Human Ecology
  • Nathan S Chesterman + 4 more

Ecosystem conservation often focuses on protecting wild places, but many remote forests and expansive savannahs have a deep human history of ecosystem management. Here we document grinding stones in the center of a high conservation-value forest, Kibale National Park, Uganda, indicating a historic human presence. Grinding stones were found at a minimum density of one per 0.57 km2 and in a range of forest types. Ecological plots around grinding stones were dominated by late successional tree species, although forest structure was comparable to formerly logged areas of Kibale. Building a more comprehensive understanding of human land-use before 1932, when protection policies began, will help explain current habitat heterogeneity. Future work should combine archaeology and ethnography to study the history and lifestyle of people who lived in Kibale. Understanding the role of people in this forest—and the role of the forest in local cultures—may elucidate contemporary ecology.

  • Research Article
  • 10.3998/glbot.5012
Ecological and Floristic Plant Surveys of Little Wabash River Nature Preserve, Indiana
  • Oct 19, 2023
  • The Great Lakes Botanist
  • Tessa M Aby-Kruger + 3 more

Forests in northeastern Indiana are relegated to relatively small fragments and have become important patches in a landscape dominated by agriculture. Little Wabash River Nature Preserve is a property in Allen County, Indiana, closed to the public and protected by ACRES Land Trust. We conducted ecological surveys at 48 regular plots located along seven transects through the property that consisted of identifying and counting individual plants at understory, midstory, and overstory strata and recording several ecological factors. These were augmented by floristic meandering surveys during the growing season of 2019 to record plant species that may not have been encountered at the ecological plots and thereby give a fuller picture of the floristic composition of the property. We encountered a total of 251 identified species during the ecological and floristic surveys. Analysis showed understory abundance, richness, and diversity were positively related to available light (photosynthetically active radiation) and negatively related to canopy cover. The most abundant species in the midstory were non-native species. Juglans nigra had the greatest frequency and dominance in the overstory. In nonmetric multidimensional scaling, there was clear separation of the plant community within the forested portion from the community in the adjacent to the small old-field. Mean C-value for the site was 2.87, which resulted in a 41.56 FQI. The FQI may be an over-estimation of the conservation importance of the site and the Mean C-value may be an under-estimation of that importance. Overall, the Nature Preserve provides an example of the plant diversity can exist in a small, protected forest. While there are some common non-native species, there is habitat for a relatively large pool of species and may be of importance for protection within the surrounding disturbed landscape.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 11
  • 10.1177/0959683619862021
Ecosystem turnover in palaeoecological records: The sensitivity of pollen and phytolith proxies to detecting vegetation change in southwestern Amazonia
  • Jul 12, 2019
  • The Holocene
  • Heather Plumpton + 2 more

Identification of ecosystem turnover in the palaeo-vegetation record is important for understanding the resilience of ecosystems to past environmental change. There is uncertainty over the ability of different types of palaeo-vegetation proxies to detect ecosystem turnover. The aim of this paper is to compare the sensitivity of two palaeo-vegetation proxies – pollen and phytoliths – to changes within and between three key tropical South American ecosystems: evergreen forest, dry forest and savannah. A quantitative approach is used to assess the sensitivity of these two proxies to vegetation changes, based on the variability of proxy assemblages from 1-ha ecological plots in ecotonal south-west Amazonia. This modern dataset of proxy variability within evergreen forest, dry forest and savannah plots is then used to define thresholds for proxy variability which differentiate floristic changes within an ecosystem from ecosystem turnover. These thresholds are applied to two palaeo-vegetation records from NE Bolivia. Our results show that pollen is more sensitive than phytoliths to changes within evergreen forest, but phytoliths are more sensitive than pollen to changes within dry forest. Both proxies were equally sensitive to changes within the savannahs. These are important considerations for palaeoecologists selecting proxies for the study of ecosystem turnover in the palaeo-record. Application of the thresholds to the palaeo-record demonstrated the utility of this quantitative approach for assessing the magnitude of vegetation change in the palaeo-record. This quantitative approach is therefore a useful tool to improve the identification of ecosystem turnover in the palaeo-record.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 14
  • 10.1556/aalim.2012.0004
Toxic compound levels in potatoes are dependent on cultivation methods
  • Sep 1, 2013
  • Acta Alimentaria
  • E Rytel + 2 more

The quality of potato tubers and their chemical composition are influenced by genetics as well as the soil fertility, weather conditions, the soil profile, and the chemical treatments that are applied. This field study on potato cultivation methods was conducted near Wroclaw (Lower Silesia), Poland. The variables used in the study included the potato cultivar [Asterix, Pirol (medium-to-early maturing varieties) and Syrena (medium-to-late maturing variety)] and the potato cultivation technology (organic, integrated and conventional). The experiment was conducted from 2005 through 2007.The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of ecological (organic), integrated and conventional cultivation methods on the nitrate and glycoalkaloid content of potato tubers. The cultivation method was determined to have a significant effect on the toxic compound concentrations in the potato tubers. The lowest glycoalkaloid and nitrate (NO3−) concentrations occurred in the potato tubers from the ecological plots. Mi...

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