Edge effects are major drivers of change in many fragmented landscapes, but are often highly variable in space and time. Here we assess variability in edge effects altering Amazon forest dynamics, plant community composition, invading species, and carbon storage, in the world's largest and longest-running experimental study of habitat fragmentation. Despite detailed knowledge of local landscape conditions, spatial variability in edge effects was only partially foreseeable: relatively predictable effects were caused by the differing proximity of plots to forest edge and varying matrix vegetation, but windstorms generated much random variability. Temporal variability in edge phenomena was also only partially predictable: forest dynamics varied somewhat with fragment age, but also fluctuated markedly over time, evidently because of sporadic droughts and windstorms. Given the acute sensitivity of habitat fragments to local landscape and weather dynamics, we predict that fragments within the same landscape will tend to converge in species composition, whereas those in different landscapes will diverge in composition. This 'landscape-divergence hypothesis', if generally valid, will have key implications for biodiversity-conservation strategies and for understanding the dynamics of fragmented ecosystems. 相似文献
Data centers, clusters, and grids have historically supported High-Performance Computing (HPC) applications. Due to the high capital and operational expenditures associated with such infrastructures, we have witnessed consistent efforts to run HPC applications in the cloud in the recent past. The potential advantages of this shift include higher scalability and lower costs. If, on the one hand, app instantiation—through customized Virtual Machines (VMs)—is a well-solved issue, on the other, the network still represents a significant bottleneck. When switching HPC applications to be executed on the cloud, we lose control of where VMs will be positioned and of the paths that will be traversed for processes to communicate with one another. To bridge this gap, we present Janus, a framework for dynamic, just-in-time path provisioning in cloud infrastructures. By leveraging emerging software-defined networking principles, the framework allows for an HPC application, once deployed, to have interprocess communication paths configured upon usage based on least-used network links (instead of resorting to shortest, pre-computed paths). Janus is fully configurable to cope with different operating parameters and communication strategies, providing a rich ecosystem for application execution speed up. Through an extensive experimental evaluation, we provide evidence that the proposed framework can lead to significant gains regarding runtime. Moreover, we show what one can expect in terms of system overheads, providing essential insights on how better benefiting from Janus.
Ecosystems - Extensive floodplains and numerous lakes in the Amazon basin are well suited to examine the role of floodable lands within the context of the sources and processing of carbon within... 相似文献
In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant - An efficient, reproducible, and unprecedented protocol of somatic embryogenesis (SE) was developed from leaf tissues of adult plants of... 相似文献
The principles of island biogeography are rarely applied to the animal assemblages of Amazonian river islands. Here, we compare bird assemblages of Amazonian river islands with a variety of mainland habitats. We also examine how bird species diversity and composition are related to island physical attributes. Birds were sampled with mist nets and qualitative censuses on 11 river islands and 24 mainland sites on the lower reaches of the Rio Negro in the Brazilian Amazon. Island bird assemblages were characterized by lower species richness and a higher abundance of a few dominant species. Additionally, the species composition of the islands was distinct from that of the mainland, including the nearby floodplain habitats. The number of bird species increased with island size and habitat diversity, and decreased with degree of isolation. In addition, small islands tended to harbor an impoverished subset of the species present on larger ones. Bird species diversity and composition on Amazonian river islands are likely influenced by the ecological succession and historical events affecting island formation. Considering their small total area across the Amazon basin, these insular fluvial communities could be disproportionately threatened by river channel disturbances related to climate change or hydroelectric dam development. Abstract in Portughese is available with online material. 相似文献
This study reports the results of 5 years of monitoring reef fish post-larvae using light traps in the Bay of Tamandaré, north-east Brazil. An annotated checklist of pre-settlement fish species, their frequency of occurrence and taxonomic characteristics are provided. In total, 4,422 post-larval fishes belonging to 36 families, 56 genera and 76 species were captured. The most species-rich families were Carangidae (7), Lutjanidae (6) and Pomacentridae (4), while the families Gerreidae (30.47%), Holocentridae (16.54%), Blenniidae (12.01%), Labrisomidae (8.36%), Lutjanidae (8.29%) and Acanthuridae (5.95%) were the most abundant. This is the first study of the taxonomic diversity and assemblage structure of settlement-stage reef fishes in the tropical south-west Atlantic Ocean. Although a few common species were not captured due to selectivity of light traps, the composition and taxonomic diversity of this first collection suggests that light traps are useful for studies of the early life history of a wide range of pre-settlement reef fishes. 相似文献