Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




FLORA AND FAUNA
Help at hand to relocate threatened species
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) Oct 17, 2013


Australian and New Zealand scientists Thursday said they have devised the "first rigorous framework" on deciding whether to relocate endangered animals threatened with extinction by climate change.

The researchers said it was designed to quantify whether the benefit of moving a vulnerable species outweighed the ecological cost.

With rapidly changing climatic conditions around the world, the framework aims to help wildlife managers make the difficult decision on whether to move animals into new areas or leave them in places that may become uninhabitable.

The researchers have "test-driven" the new framework using the hypothetical case of the New Zealand tuatara, the country's largest reptile, which could be moved from its home on small offshore islands in the north of the country to the South Island, where it is currently extinct.

"With the climate changing more rapidly than species can move or adapt, our only chance of saving some species may be to move them to more climatically suitable areas," said lead author and environmental scientist Tracy Rout from the University of Melbourne.

"But introducing species to areas outside their historical range is a controversial strategy, and we have to be sure it will work, both for the animals themselves, and for other species in their new habitat."

The work follows a request by the International Union for Conservation of Nature for a new process to assess species relocation.

The resulting study, published Thursday in the journal PLOS ONE, takes some of the guesswork out of the decision-making.

With "the world's first rigorous quantitative framework" those decisions can now be made by combining scientific prediction with clear management goals.

"Our framework separates these out, makes them explicit, and then combines them in a logical way," Rout said.

Hugh Possingham, director of the Australian Research Council's Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, said the new approach "uses tried and tested tools from economics and applied mathematics to make smarter conservation decisions".

"This new framework takes into account the benefit of moving a species based on the likelihood it will go extinct in its original habitat as the local climate becomes hostile; the likelihood that a breeding population can be established at a new site; and the value or importance of the species," he said.

"The ecological cost depends on the potential for the species to adversely affect the ecosystem at the new site.

"Species are considered candidates for relocation only if the benefit of doing so is greater than the ecological cost."

Tuatara are endemic to New Zealand. They are often referred to as "living fossils" and are the only survivors of an order of reptiles that roamed the earth at the same time as the dinosaurs.

Other animals being considered for relocation are Australia's critically-endangered Western Swamp Tortoise, tiny Mountain pygmy possum and Golden Bowerbird whose habitat has become either too dry or too warm.

.


Related Links
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FLORA AND FAUNA
Britain's panda 'suffers miscarriage'
London (AFP) Oct 15, 2013
Britain's only female giant panda is believed to have suffered a miscarriage, Edinburgh Zoo said on Tuesday. It was a doubly sad day for British zoos, after London Zoo also announced Tuesday that the first tiger cub born there in 17 years had drowned. Edinburgh said its panda Tian Tian, who is spending a decade in the Scottish capital on loan from China with her male companion Yang Guang ... read more


FLORA AND FAUNA
SES Partners With ESA To Develop Innovative Satellite Platform Electra

British engineers hope to reboot 50-year-old computer

Circadian rhythms in skin stem cells protect us against UV rays

Northwestern Researchers Develop Compact, High-Power Terahertz Source at Room Temperature

FLORA AND FAUNA
Third Advanced EHF Satellite Will Enhance Resiliency of Military Communications

USAF Launches Third Advanced Extremely High Frequency Satellite

Atlas 5 Lofts 3rd AEHF Military Comms Satellites

Unified Military Intelligence Picture Helping to Dispel the Fog of War

FLORA AND FAUNA
Sunshield preparations bring Gaia closer to deep-space Soyuz launch

SES-8 Arrives At Cape Canaveral For SpaceX Falcon 9 Launch

Spaceport Colorado and S3 Sign Memorandum of Understanding

Milky Way-mapping Gaia receives its sunshield

FLORA AND FAUNA
Plan maps development of China's sat-nav industry

Raytheon completes critical design review for GPS OCX software

Tracking devices to go toe-to-toe with smartwatches

Orbcomm Acquires The SENS Asset Tracking Operation

FLORA AND FAUNA
EU revives airline carbon tax proposal

In Israel, lingering bitterness over a failed fighter project

Brazil aims to build advanced fighter jets with Russia

Northrop Grumman to Upgrade French Navy E-2C Hawkeye Fleet

FLORA AND FAUNA
CU, MIT breakthrough in photonics could allow for faster and faster electronics

Researchers demonstrate 'accelerator on a chip'

Spirals of Light May Lead to Better Electronics

Promising new alloy for resistive switching memory

FLORA AND FAUNA
Astrium Enhances TerraSAR-X Resolution and Coverage Capabilities

Iron in the Earth's core weakens before melting

DroneMetrex Accomplishes Another Mapping Project Using Its Unique Topodrone-100

Flood maps from satellite data can help emergency response

FLORA AND FAUNA
Outdoor air pollution a leading cause of cancer

'Toxic bomb' ticks on Maldives rubbish island

Pulp friction cleans up 'Brockovich' chemical

WHO launches drive against mercury thermometers




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement