22 results on '"Bourn, Nigel"'
Search Results
2. Traits data for the butterflies and macro-moths of Great Britain and Ireland
- Author
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Cook, Patrick M., Tordoff, George M., Davis, Tony M., Parsons, Mark S., Dennis, Emily B., Fox, Richard, Botham, Marc S., and Bourn, Nigel A. D.
- Published
- 2022
3. Funding and delivering the routine testing of management interventions to improve conservation effectiveness
- Author
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Tinsley-Marshall, Paul, Downey, Harriet, Adum, Gilbert, Al-Fulaij, Nida, Bourn, Nigel A.D., Brotherton, Peter N.M., Frick, Winifred F., Hancock, Mark H., Hellon, Josh, Hudson, Michael A., Kortland, Kenny, Mastro, Kate, McNicol, Catherine M., McPherson, Tom, Mickleburgh, Simon, Moss, James F., Nichols, Christopher P., O'Brien, David, Ockendon, Nancy, Paterson, Stuart, Parks, Danni, Pimm, Stuart L., Schofield, Henry, Simkins, Ashley T., Watuwa, James, Wormald, Kathy, Wilkinson, John, Wilson, Jeremy D., and Sutherland, William J.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The decline of butterflies in Europe : Problems, significance, and possible solutions
- Author
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Warren, Martin S., Maes, Dirk, van Swaay, Chris A. M., Goffart, Philippe, Van Dyck, Hans, Bourn, Nigel A. D., Wynhoff, Irma, Hoare, Dan, and Ellis, Sam
- Published
- 2021
5. The history, science and preliminary results from the reintroduction of the Chequered Skipper, Carterocephalus palaemon into Rockingham Forest, England.
- Author
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Bourn, Nigel and Bourn, Nigel
- Subjects
- Ecology.
- Published
- 2024
6. The ecology, conservation and population genetics of three species of Zygaenid moths, Zygaena lonicerae, Zygaena purpuralis and Zygaena filipendulae in North West Scotland
- Author
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Bourn, Nigel A. D.
- Subjects
577 ,Ecology - Abstract
This study investigated the ecology of three species of Zygaenid or Burnet moth, the Narrow bordered five spot burnet or Talisker burnet (Zygaena lonicerae jocelynae) a sub-species confined to three locations on the Isle of Skye, the Transparent burnet (Zygaena purpuralis) restricted to between 25 and 30 'colonies' on the west coast of Scotland (also described as a sub-species) and the Six spot burnet (Zygaena filipendulae), which although common is restricted to coastal areas in Scotland. The burnets of Scotland have been the subject of some conservation concern given their limited distributions in Britain and the discovery that the New Forest burnet colony in Argyll was under severe pressure from an increase in sheep grazing. This concern has focused attention on the other restricted burnets. All three species occur at Talisker, Isle of Skye, where autecological studies of the species were undertaken. This data could then be examined in terms of the requirements of the three species. Grazing levels are crucial to the ecology of all three of the species and it is the variation in the vegetation structure occurring at each specific area within Talisker which allows the three species to co-occur there. The Talisker burnet is restricted to ungrazed undercliff grassland where its foodplant, Lathyrus pratensis grows in abundance. Within the ungrazed areas there is considerable variation in the vegetation heights available and in areas were the vegetation is short the larvae are found relatively high in the vegetation, as are the pupae of this species. Genetic analysis of populations of Z. purpuralis indicate that they are quite diverse, having maintained a high rate of genetic variability between populations which are relatively close and indicates that populations greater than 10 kilometres apart have very little interchange. To conservation population of Z. purpuralis grazing is required on several Z. purpuralis sites to maintain the short vegetation required, while at Talisker Z. lonicerae requires early successful areas which are created by natural rockfalls and soil slippage.
- Published
- 1995
7. Landscape-scale dynamics of a threatened species respond to local-scale conservation management
- Author
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Natural Environment Research Council (UK), Jones, Rachel, Bourn, Nigel A.D., Maclean, Ilya M.D., Wilson, Robert J., Natural Environment Research Council (UK), Jones, Rachel, Bourn, Nigel A.D., Maclean, Ilya M.D., and Wilson, Robert J.
- Abstract
Landscape-scale approaches are increasingly advocated for species conservation but ensuring landscape level persistence by enlarging the size of patches or increasing their physical connectivity is often impractical. Here, we test how such barriers can be overcome by management of habitat at the local (site-based) level, using a rare butterfly as an exemplar. We used four surveys of the entire UK distribution of the Lulworth skipper Thymelicus acteon over 40 years to test how local habitat influences population density and colonization/extinction dynamics, and parameterized, validated and applied a metapopulation model to simulate effects of varying local habitat quality on regional persistence. We found the total number of populations in four distribution snapshots between 1978 and 2017 varied between 59 and 84, and from 1997 to 2017 34% of local populations showed turnover (colonization or extinction). Population density was closely linked to vegetation characteristics indicative of management, namely height and food plant frequency, both of which changed through time. Simulating effects of habitat quality on metapopulation dynamics 40 years into the future suggests coordinated changes to two key components of quality (vegetation height and food plant frequency) would increase patch occupancy above the range observed in the past 40 years (50–80%). In contrast, deterioration of either component below threshold levels leads to metapopulation retraction to core sub-networks of patches, or eventual extirpation. Our results indicate that changes to habitat quality can overcome constraints imposed by habitat patch area and spatial location on relative rates of colonization and local extinction, demonstrating the sensitivity of regional dynamics to targeted in situ management. Local habitat management therefore plays a key role in landscape-scale conservation. Monitoring of population density, and the monitoring and management of local (site-level) habitat quality, there
- Published
- 2023
8. Precipitation buffers temperature‐driven local extinctions of moths at warm range margins
- Author
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Hordley, Lisbeth A., primary, Fox, Richard, additional, Suggitt, Andrew J., additional, and Bourn, Nigel A. D., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Protected areas facilitate species' range expansions
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Thomas, Chris D., Gillingham, Phillipa K., Bradbury, Richard B., Roy, David B., Anderson, Barbara J., Baxter, John M., Bourn, Nigel A. D., Crick, Humphrey Q. P., Findon, Richard A., Fox, Richard, Hodgson, Jenny A., Holt, Alison R., Morecroft, Mike D., O'Hanlon, Nina J., Oliver, Tom H., Pearce-Higgins, James W., Procter, Deborah A., Thomas, Jeremy A., Walker, Kevin J., Walmsley, Clive A., Wilson, Robert J., and Hill, Jane K.
- Published
- 2012
10. Brownfield sites promote biodiversity at a landscape scale
- Author
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Macgregor, Callum J., Bunting, M. Jane, Deutz, Pauline, Bourn, Nigel A.D., Roy, David B., Mayes, Will M., Macgregor, Callum J., Bunting, M. Jane, Deutz, Pauline, Bourn, Nigel A.D., Roy, David B., and Mayes, Will M.
- Abstract
Repurposing of brownfield sites is often promoted, because it is perceived that protecting the “green belt” limits damage to biodiversity; yet brownfield sites provide scarce habitats with limited disturbance, so conversely are also perceived to be ecologically valuable. Combining data from three national-scale UK biological monitoring schemes with location data on historical landfill sites, we show that species richness is positively associated with both the presence and increasing area of ex-landfill sites for birds, plants and several insect taxa. Assemblage rarity of birds is also positively associated with presence of ex-landfill sites. Species richness associated with ex-landfill sites declined over time for birds and insects but increased over time for plants. These findings suggest that development of brownfield sites may have unintended negative consequences for biodiversity, and imply that to minimise loss of biodiversity, brownfield site repurposing could be targeted towards smaller sites, or sites in areas with a high density of other brownfield sites.
- Published
- 2022
11. Assessing Butterflies in Europe - Butterfly Indicators 1990-2018 : Technical report
- Author
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van Swaay, Chris A.M., Dennis, Emily B., Schmucki, Reto, Sevilleja, C. G., Aghababyan, Karen, Åström, Sandra, Balalaikins, M., Bonelli, Simona, Botham, Marc, Bourn, Nigel, Brereton, Tom, Cancela, J.P., Carlisle, Bruce, Chambers, Paul, Collins, Sue, Dopagne, Claude, Dziekanska, I., Escobés, Ruth, Faltynek Fric, Zdenek, Feldmann, Reinart, Garcia Fernandez, Jose Manuel, Fontaine, Benoît, Goloshchapova, Svetlana, Gracianteparaluceta, Ana, Harpke, Alexander, Harrower, C., Heliölä, Janne, Khanamirian, G., Kolev, Z., Komac, Benjamin, Krenn, H., Kühn, Elisabeth, Lang, Andreas, Leopold, P., Lysaght, L., Maes, Dirk, McGowan, D., Mestdagh, Xavier, Middlebrook, I., Monasterio, Yeray, Monteiro, E., Munguira, Miguel L, Musche, Martin, Õunap, Erki, Ozden, O., Paramo, F., Pavlíčko, A., Pettersson, Lars B., Piqueray, Julien, Prokofev, I., Rákosy, L., Roth, T., Rüdisser, J., Šašić, Martina, Settele, Josef, Sielezniew, Marcin, Stefanescu, Constanti, Švitra, Giedrius, Szabadfalvi, A., Teixeira, S. M., Tiitsaar, Anu, Tzirkalli, Elli, Verovnik, Rudi, Warren, Martin S., Wynhoff, Irma, and Roy, David B.
- Subjects
Ecology ,Zoology - Published
- 2020
12. The decline of butterflies in Europe : problems, significance, and possible solutions
- Author
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UCL - SST/ELI - Earth and Life Institute, Warren, Martin S., Maes, Dirk, van Swaay, Chris A. M., Goffart, Philippe, Van Dyck, Hans, Bourn, Nigel A. D., Wynhoff, Irma, Hoare, Dan, Ellis, Sam, UCL - SST/ELI - Earth and Life Institute, Warren, Martin S., Maes, Dirk, van Swaay, Chris A. M., Goffart, Philippe, Van Dyck, Hans, Bourn, Nigel A. D., Wynhoff, Irma, Hoare, Dan, and Ellis, Sam
- Abstract
We review changes in the status of butterflies in Europe, focusing on long-running population data available for the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Belgium, based on standardized monitoring transects. In the United Kingdom, 8% of resident species have become extinct, and since 1976 overall numbers declined by around 50%. In the Netherlands, 20% of species have become extinct, and since 1990 overall numbers in the country declined by 50%. Distribution trends showed that butterfly distributions began decreasing long ago, and between 1890 and 1940, distributions declined by 80%. In Flanders (Belgium), 20 butterflies have become extinct (29%), and between 1992 and 2007 overall numbers declined by around 30%. A European Grassland Butterfly Indicator from 16 European countries shows there has been a 39% decline of grassland butterflies since 1990. The 2010 Red List of European butterflies listed 38 of the 482 European species (8%) as threatened and 44 species (10%) as near threatened (note that 47 species were not assessed). A country level analysis indicates that the average Red List rating is highest in central and mid-Western Europe and lowest in the far north of Europe and around the Mediterranean. The causes of the decline of butterflies are thought to be similar in most countries, mainly habitat loss and degradation and chemical pollution. Climate change is allowing many species to spread northward while bringing new threats to susceptible species. We describe examples of possible conservation solutions and a summary of policy changes needed to conserve butterflies and other insects.
- Published
- 2021
13. The European Butterfly Indicator for Grassland species: 1990-2017 : Technical report
- Author
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van Swaay, Chris A.M., Dennis, Emily B., Schmucki, Reto, Sevilleja, C. G., Balalaikins, M., Botham, Marc, Bourn, Nigel, Brereton, Tom, Cancela, J.P., Carlisle, Bruce, Paul, Chambers, Collins, Sue, Dopagne, Claude, Escobés, Ruth, Feldmann, Reinart, Fernández-García, José María, Fontaine, Benoît, Gracianteparaluceta, A., Harrower, C., Harpke, Alexander, Heliölä, Janne, Komac, Benjamin, Kühn, Elisabeth, Lang, Andreas, Maes, Dirk, Mestdagh, Xavier, Middlebrook, I., Monasterio-León, Yeray, Munguira, Miguel L, Murray, Tomás, Musche, Martin, Õunap, Erki, Paramo, F., Pettersson, Lars, Piqueray, Julien, Settele, Josef, Stefanescu, Constanti, Švitra, Giedrius, Tiitsaar, Anu, Verovnik, Rudi, Warren, Martin S., Wynhoff, Irma, and Roy, David B.
- Subjects
Ecology ,Zoology - Published
- 2019
14. Opinions of citizen scientists on open access to UK butterfly and moth occurrence data
- Author
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Fox, Richard, Bourn, Nigel A. D., Dennis, Emily B., Heafield, Richard T., Maclean, Ilya M. D., and Wilson, Robert J.
- Abstract
Citizen science plays an increasingly important role in biodiversity research and conservation, enabling large volumes of data to be gathered across extensive spatial scales in a cost-effective manner. Open access increases the utility of such data, informing land-use decisions that may affect species persistence, enhancing transparency and encouraging proliferation of research applications. However, open access provision of recent, fine-scale spatial information on the locations of species may also prompt legitimate concerns among contributors regarding possible unintended negative conservation impacts, violations of privacy and commercial exploitation of volunteer-gathered data. Here we canvas the attitudes towards open access of contributors (104 regional co-ordinators and 510 recorders) of species occurrence records to two of the largest citizen science biodiversity recording schemes, the UK’s Butterflies for the New Millennium project and National Moth Recording Scheme. We find that while the majority of participants expressed support for open access in principle, most were more cautious in practice, preferring to limit the spatial resolution of records, particularly of threatened species, and restrict commercial reuse of data. In addition, citizen scientists’ opinions differed between UK countries, taxonomic groups and the level of involvement volunteers had in the schemes. In order to maintain successful and democratic citizen science schemes, organisers, funders and data users must understand and respect participants’ expectations and aspirations regarding open data while seeking to optimise data use for scientific and societal benefits.
- Published
- 2019
15. Overcoming the challenges of public data archiving for citizen science biodiversity recording and monitoring schemes
- Author
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Pearce-Higgins, James W., Baillie, Stephen R., Boughey, Katherine, Bourn, Nigel A.D., Foppen, Ruud P.B., Gillings, Simon, Gregory, Richard D., Hunt, Tom, Jiguet, Frederic, Lehikoinen, Aleksi, Musgrove, Andy J., Robinson, Rob A., Roy, David B., Siriwardena, Gavin M., Walker, Kevin J., Wilson, Jeremy D., Pearce-Higgins, James W., Baillie, Stephen R., Boughey, Katherine, Bourn, Nigel A.D., Foppen, Ruud P.B., Gillings, Simon, Gregory, Richard D., Hunt, Tom, Jiguet, Frederic, Lehikoinen, Aleksi, Musgrove, Andy J., Robinson, Rob A., Roy, David B., Siriwardena, Gavin M., Walker, Kevin J., and Wilson, Jeremy D.
- Abstract
1. Public data archiving (PDA) is widely advocated as a means of achieving open data standards, leading to improved data preservation, increased scientific reproducibility, and transparency, as well as additional data use. 2. Public data archiving was primarily conceived to archive data from short‐term, single‐purpose scientific studies. It is now more widely applied, including to large‐scale citizen science biodiversity recording and monitoring schemes which combine the efforts of volunteers with professional scientists. 3. This may affect the financial security of such schemes by reducing income from data and analytical services. Communication between scheme organizers and researchers may be disrupted, reducing scientific quality and impeding scheme development. It may also have an impact on the participation of some volunteers. 4. Synthesis and applications. In response to the challenges of public data archiving for citizen science biodiversity recording and monitoring schemes, the archive function of scheme organizations should be better recognized by those promoting open data principles. Increased financial support from the public sector or from commercial or academic data users may offset financial risk. Those in favour of public data archiving should do more to facilitate communication between nonscheme users and the originating schemes, while a more flexible approach to data archiving may be required to address potential impacts on volunteer participation.
- Published
- 2018
16. The effectiveness of protected areas in the conservation of species with changing geographical ranges
- Author
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Gillingham, Phillipa K., Bradbury, Richard, Roy, David B., Anderson, Barbara J., Baxter, John M., Bourn, Nigel A., Crick, Humphrey Q. P., Findon, Richard A., Fox, Richard, Franco, Aldina, Hill, Jane K., Hodgson, Jenny A., Holt, Alison R., Morecroft, Mike D., O'Hanlon, Nina J., Oliver, Tom H., Pearce-Higgins, James W., Procter, Deborah A., Thomas, Jeremy A., Walker, Kevin J., Walmsley, Clive A., Wilson, Robert J., and Thomas, Chris D.
- Abstract
A cornerstone of conservation is the designation and management of protected areas (PAs): locations often under conservation management containing species of conservation concern, where some development and other detrimental influences are prevented or mitigated. However, the value of PAs for conserving biodiversity in the long term has been questioned given that species are changing their distributions in response to climatic change. There is a concern that PAs may become climatically unsuitable for those species that they were designated to protect, and may not be located appropriately to receive newly-colonizing species for which the climate is improving. In the present study, we analyze fine-scale distribution data from detailed resurveys of seven butterfly and 11 bird species in Great Britain aiming to examine any effect of PA designation in preventing extinctions and promoting colonizations. We found a positive effect of PA designation on species' persistence at trailing-edge warm range margins, although with a decreased magnitude at higher latitudes and altitudes. In addition, colonizations by range expanding species were more likely to occur on PAs even after altitude and latitude were taken into account. PAs will therefore remain an important strategy for conservation. The potential for PA management to mitigate the effects of climatic change for retracting species deserves further investigation.
- Published
- 2015
17. Identifying key knowledge needs for evidence-based conservation of wild insect pollinators: a collaborative cross-sectoral exercise
- Author
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Dicks, Lynn V., Abrahams, Andrew, Atkinson, John, Biesmeijer, Jacobus, Bourn, Nigel, Brown, Chris, Brown, Mark J.F., Carvell, Claire, Connolly, Chris, Cresswell, James E., Croft, Pat, Darvill, Ben, De Zylva, Paul, Effingham, Philip, Fountain, Michelle, Goggin, Anthony, Harding, Debbie, Harding, Tony, Hartfield, Chris, Heard, Matthew S., Heathcote, Richard, Heaver, David, Holland, John, Howe, Mike, Hughes, Brin, Huxley, Theresa, Kunin, William E., Little, Julian, Mason, Caroline, Memmott, Jane, Osborne, Juliet, Pankhurst, Tim, Paxton, Robert J., Pocock, Michael J.O., Potts, Simon G., Power, Eileen F., Raine, Nigel E., Ranelagh, Elizabeth, Roberts, Stuart, Saunders, Rob, Smith, Katie, Smith, Richard M., Sutton, Peter, Tilley, Luke A.N., Tinsley, Andrew, Tonhasca, Athayde, Vanbergen, Adam J., Webster, Sarah, Wilson, Alan, Sutherland, William J., Dicks, Lynn V., Abrahams, Andrew, Atkinson, John, Biesmeijer, Jacobus, Bourn, Nigel, Brown, Chris, Brown, Mark J.F., Carvell, Claire, Connolly, Chris, Cresswell, James E., Croft, Pat, Darvill, Ben, De Zylva, Paul, Effingham, Philip, Fountain, Michelle, Goggin, Anthony, Harding, Debbie, Harding, Tony, Hartfield, Chris, Heard, Matthew S., Heathcote, Richard, Heaver, David, Holland, John, Howe, Mike, Hughes, Brin, Huxley, Theresa, Kunin, William E., Little, Julian, Mason, Caroline, Memmott, Jane, Osborne, Juliet, Pankhurst, Tim, Paxton, Robert J., Pocock, Michael J.O., Potts, Simon G., Power, Eileen F., Raine, Nigel E., Ranelagh, Elizabeth, Roberts, Stuart, Saunders, Rob, Smith, Katie, Smith, Richard M., Sutton, Peter, Tilley, Luke A.N., Tinsley, Andrew, Tonhasca, Athayde, Vanbergen, Adam J., Webster, Sarah, Wilson, Alan, and Sutherland, William J.
- Abstract
1. In response to evidence of insect pollinator declines, organisations in many sectors, including the food and farming industry, are investing in pollinator conservation. They are keen to ensure that their efforts use the best available science. 2. We convened a group of 32 ‘conservation practitioners’ with an active interest in pollinators and 16 insect pollinator scientists. The conservation practitioners include representatives from UK industry (including retail), environmental non-government organisations and nature conservation agencies. 3. We collaboratively developed a long list of 246 knowledge needs relating to conservation of wild insect pollinators in the UK. We refined and selected the most important knowledge needs, through a three-stage process of voting and scoring, including discussions of each need at a workshop. 4. We present the top 35 knowledge needs as scored by conservation practitioners or scientists. We find general agreement in priorities identified by these two groups. The priority knowledge needs will structure ongoing work to make science accessible to practitioners, and help to guide future science policy and funding. 5. Understanding the economic benefits of crop pollination, basic pollinator ecology and impacts of pesticides on wild pollinators emerge strongly as priorities, as well as a need to monitor floral resources in the landscape.
- Published
- 2013
18. Conserving threatened Lepidoptera: Towards an effective woodland management policy in landscapes under intense human land-use
- Author
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UCL - SST/ELI/ELIB - Biodiversity, Merckx, Thomas, Feber, Ruth E., Hoare, Daniel J., Parsons, Mark S., Kelly, Caroline J., Macdonald, David W., Bourn, Nigel A.D., UCL - SST/ELI/ELIB - Biodiversity, Merckx, Thomas, Feber, Ruth E., Hoare, Daniel J., Parsons, Mark S., Kelly, Caroline J., Macdonald, David W., and Bourn, Nigel A.D.
- Abstract
Although intensive forestry practices have greatly reduced the biodiversity of native woodland, sympathetic management offers much potential to reverse these negative trends. We tested, using a species-rich group, whether woodland conservation management practices could be of overall benefit, for threatened generalists and specialists alike. Our landscape-scale light-trap experiment compared presence/absence, abundance and species richness of macro-moths at 36 repeatedly sampled sites from six experimental ‘woodland management’ treatments. We recorded 11,670 individuals from 265 species. Our results show that the sheltered, dark, humid, late-successional, high deciduous forest biotope is characterised by high numbers of both individuals and species of moth, and is especially important for some scarce and specialist species of conservation concern. Coppicing and ride widening, which open up dense forest structures, are also valuable woodland conservation tools for macro-moths. Specifically, we show that the mechanism behind the pattern of increased species richness at the woodland-scale involved an increased structural and hence increased micro-climatic and resource diversity for species with an affinity for more open biotopes. This benefits generalist species of conservation concern. Additionally, we show that woodland area is an important factor affecting both moth abundance and species richness in coppiced plots, especially so for nationally declining and severely declining species, suggesting that larger woodlands offer the best opportunities to increase biodiversity through active coppice management. Based on these complementary findings we recommend zoning woodland conservation management practices to take into account the differential value of successional stages for different ecological groups of Lepidoptera.
- Published
- 2012
19. Landscape-scale conservation for butterflies and moths: lessons from the UK.
- Author
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BOURN, NIGEL, ELLIS, SAM, and BULMAN, CAROLINE
- Abstract
In recent years Butterfly Conservation has shifted the majority of its conservation work from a focus on single sites to networks of sites across a landscape. This article describes the main lessons from this experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
20. Grizzled Skippers (Pyrgus malvae) under threat: Investigating impacts of climate and land-use change on an early successional habitat UK specialist
- Author
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Bell, Fiona, Hodgson, Jenny, Fenton, Andy, Bourn, Nigel, Bulman, Caroline, and Botham, Marc
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Genomic Monitoring of a Reintroduced Butterfly Uncovers Contrasting Founder Lineage Survival.
- Author
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Halford G, Maes D, Yung CJ, Whiteford S, Bourn NAD, Bulman CR, Goffart P, Hodgson JA, and Saccheri IJ
- Abstract
Genetic factors can have a major influence on both short- and long-term success of reintroductions. Genomic monitoring can give a range of insights into the early life of a reintroduced population and ultimately can help to avoid wasting limited conservation resources. In this study, we characterise the genetic diversity of a reintroduced Carterocephalus palaemon (Chequered Skipper butterfly) population in England with respect to the spatial genetic structure and diversity of the source populations in south Belgium. We aim to evaluate the success of the reintroduction, including the effectiveness of the donor sampling strategy, and assess genetic vulnerabilities that may affect the population's future. We also use an isolation-by-distance approach to make quantitative inferences about dispersal, and we explore covariance between host mitochondrial and Wolbachia genomes. We find that, four generations following the initial release, the reintroduced population, founded by 66 wild-caught adults, has an effective size of c. 33, yet has retained similar levels of genomic heterozygosity to those in the source subpopulations in Belgium and shows low levels of inbreeding. However, the restricted number of founders and variance in reproductive success among the surviving families have resulted in a higher level of kinship, likely to result in somewhat higher rates of inbreeding in the future. Furthermore, there is a distinct split between two source landscapes in Belgium, and all genomic evidence suggests that the reintroduced population is descended from only one of these landscapes (called Fagne). We discuss potential causes behind these results, including whether Wolbachia strains are causing genetic incompatibility between clades. We conclude that a conservative strategy for any further translocations would prefer Fagne sites as sources because of the strong evidence of their ability to survive. However, our results warrant further investigation into the reasons for the divergence found in Belgium., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (© 2025 The Author(s). Evolutionary Applications published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The genome sequence of the Arctic Skipper, Carterocephalus palaemon (Pallas, 1771).
- Author
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Lohse K, Ebdon S, Mackintosh A, Martin S, Saccheri IJ, Bourn NAD, and Vila R
- Abstract
We present a genome assembly from an individual male Carterocephalus palaemon (the Arctic Skipper; Arthropoda; Insecta; Lepidoptera; Hesperiidae). The genome sequence is 394.5 megabases in span. The whole assembly is scaffolded into 31 chromosomal pseudomolecules, including the Z sex chromosome. The mitochondrial genome has also been assembled and is 15.78 kilobases in length. Gene annotation of this assembly on Ensembl identified 17,032 protein coding genes., Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed., (Copyright: © 2023 Lohse K et al.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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