95 research outputs found
TIME-FOCUSED ANALYSES OF WILD BOAR ECOLOGY AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS FOR MANAGEMENT
Wild boar is a keystone species of human-wildlife conflicts in Europe. Investigating its ecology with a proper consideration of the temporal dimension would allow to synthetize the relationships among resources acquisition, reproduction, and survival, providing useful implications for its management on a large spatial scale. In Chapters 1 and 2, I investigated wild boar breeding strategies and reproductive temporal patterns. In Chapters 3, 4, and 5 I evaluated the temporal patterns of the use of two protected areas of different size by the wild boar, its risk-induced resources selection, and its behavioral reactions to the stress due to capture, respectively. Adult males adopted a capital breeding strategy, while subadult males were income breeders. Resources availability strongly influenced female reproductive timing and synchrony, without really affecting the ratio of reproducing females. The observed increment in the use of a large protected area in autumn was likely driven by food resources distribution, rather than hunting avoidance. Wild boar adopted two opposite risk-taking strategies, both of them partially trading the survival with the acquisition of resources. Finally, capture and handling induced a strong reduction of activity and movement lasting about 10 days. A comprehensive interpretation of results highlighted that wild boar ecology is based on the achievement of a short-term reproductive success, overruling both resources acquisition and medium-term survival. In the perspective of wild boar management on a large scale, the additive mortality induced by culling plans is thus likely to result ineffective in provoking durable reductions of wild population numbers. Investigating wild boar reproductive and behavioral ecology with a proper consideration of the temporal dimension substantially advanced the available knowledge on this species, opening interesting perspectives for its management on both large and small scalesBeing cause of crop damages, vehicles collisions, and spreading disease, wild boar is a keystone species of human-wildlife conflicts in Europe. Investigating wild boar ecology with a proper consideration of its temporal dimension would allow to synthetize the relationships among resources acquisition, reproduction, and survival, and to provide useful implications for its management on a large spatial scale and in local contexts. In Chapters 1 and 2, I investigated wild boar breeding strategies and reproductive temporal patterns, considering environmental factors such as weather and food availability. In Chapters 3, 4, and 5 I evaluated the temporal patterns of the use of two protected areas of different size by the wild boar, its risk-induced resources selection, and its behavioral reactions to the stress due to capture, respectively. A comprehensive interpretation of results highlighted that wild boar ecology is based on the achievement of a short-term reproductive success, overruling both resources acquisition and medium-term survival. In the perspective of wild boar management on a large scale, the additive mortality induced by culling plans is thus likely to result ineffective in provoking durable reductions of wild population numbers. Moreover, the investigated aspects of wild boar ecology provided several implications for specific management contexts. Adult males adopted a capital breeding strategy, while subadult males were income breeders. Male reproductive efficiency is thus likely to prove highly resilient against the human harvest and ecological perturbations, suggesting the inconvenience of a male-biased culling to control wild boar populations. Resources availability strongly influenced female reproductive timing and synchrony, without really affecting the ratio of reproducing females (constantly close to the total of adult and subadult females): this evidence should be considered when arranging culling plans, in order to avoid underestimations of the reproductive potential of wild boar populations. The finding that the observed increment in the use of a large protected area in autumn was likely driven by food resources distribution, rather than hunting avoidance, suggests that the common belief of wild boar moving into reserves to avoid hunting should be verified on a local scale. Culling individuals inside protected areas in such circumstances can thus prove ineffective to reduce human-wild boar conflicts in the bordering areas. Wild boar adopted two opposite risk-taking strategies, implying the need for a plastic and multifaceted management approach. Finally, capture and handling induced strong behavioral modifications in wild boar, suggesting the need for standardized protocols aimed at reducing stress and protecting the welfare of captured individuals. In conclusion, investigating wild boar reproductive and behavioral ecology with a proper consideration of the temporal dimension substantially advanced the available knowledge on this species, opening interesting perspectives for its management on both large and small scales
Raw dataset of Italian wild boar GPS spatial location for the study "Sex-specific seasonal variations of wild boar distance traveled and home range size"
The following document contains raw spatial locations collected by means of GPS telemetry on free-ranging wild boar in Central Italy from 2013 to 2020, used in the study entitled "Sex-specific seasonal variations of wild boar distance traveled and home range size". The excel is composed of three sheets: #1 individual metadata, #2 GPS spatial locations, and #3 legend
Nieopublikowany wiersz Stefana Jaworskiego?
The author publishes a poem dedicated to the Virgin Mary, found handwritten in a book belonging to Stefan Javors'kyj, and brings evidence of his authorship
Barokova homiletyka u schidnoslov ́janskomu kul ́turnomu prostori
The author analyses common features and specificities of some of the most important homiletic works written in Ukraine in the 17th century, with refernce to works of the same genre in Russia and Poland
Renesansni istoriohrafichni mify v Ukrajini
The author analyses some common places of Ukrainian historiography in comparision with similar motives in the history writing of Renaissance and Baroque authors in Poland, Dalmatia and Italy
Do pytannja pro homiletyku Stefana Javors'koho
The Author analyses the sermons of Stefan Javors'kyj written in Ukraine, contained in the autograph of the author. She invites scholarship to a thorough investigation and publications of the sermon
Chy isnuje kanon ukrajinskoho baroku?
The author discusses about the need of considering the Ukrainian literature of the Baroque time as a complex structure which represents an autonomous system of linguistic, stylistic, ideological and religious values, though being strictly connected to and partially overlapping with the systems of the neighboring peoples of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and of Russia
Arte della predicazione nellÚcraina del Seicento : la ́Mowa duchowna ́ di Pietro Mohyla e la variante del ́Trebnik ́
The author analises how the preacher elaborates his sermon in the theoretical treatise and in the practical application during a wedding service. Text analysis and general observations
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