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result(s) for
"FitzGerald, Lee"
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Mounted and canine police
by
Fitzgerald, Lee, author
in
Police Juvenile literature.
,
Mounted police Juvenile literature.
,
Police dogs Juvenile literature.
2016
Police officers often have partners, and sometimes those partners are animals. Horses and dogs are animals commonly used by police forces around the world. Through engaging text and colorful photographs, readers explore the life-saving relationships between these animals and the police officers who work with them. Fun fact boxes and a graphic organizer present addition information about the training and skills needed to follow this exciting career path.
Fat reserve and body condition variation in Argentine black and white tegus: native-invasive comparisons and environmental drivers in Florida
by
Balaguera-Reina, Sergio A.
,
Naretto, Sergio
,
Cole, Jenna M.
in
Adipose Tissue
,
Animal reproduction
,
Animals
2026
Invasive species impose major ecological and economic costs on ecosystems and countries where introduced. To effectively manage Argentine black and white tegus ( Salvator merianae ) within their invasive range, it is important that management actions are based on species’ biology. We estimated tegu percentage fat and body condition in native (Cordoba, Argentina) and non-native (South Florida, United States) populations and identified biological, temporal, and environmental variables that influence tegu body condition in South Florida. Large adult tegus in Cordoba had larger fat reserves than tegus in South Florida. However, body condition values were highly similar between the native and non-native range throughout the year, showing a well-adapted tegu population to South Florida environmental conditions. Generalized additive mixed models (size estimate = 2.67) showed very strong (p-value < 0.001) to moderate (p-value <0.01) evidence of Julian day, minimum temperature, and percentage fat individually affecting tegu body condition in South Florida (deviance explained 37%). The direction and magnitude of univariate effects varied from positive linear relationship (minimum temperature) impacting body condition up to 18% to negative (Julian day) and positive (percentage fat) monomodal relationships impacting body condition up to 24% and 6%, respectively. Our results provide insights as to how adaptable tegus are physiologically to novel environments and their capability to maintain body condition that is similar to, or better than that of native individuals. These findings can inform management in Florida by identifying seasonal windows when tegus’ activity and condition may make them more susceptible to targeted removal.
Journal Article
Bomb squads
by
Fitzgerald, Lee, author
in
Bomb squads Juvenile literature.
,
Bomb threats Juvenile literature.
,
Bomb squads.
2016
An introduction to the high-risk jobs that members of a bomb squad have to do.
Genetic and demographic consequences of range contraction patterns during biological annihilation
2023
Species range contractions both contribute to, and result from, biological annihilation, yet do not receive the same attention as extinctions. Range contractions can lead to marked impacts on populations but are usually characterized only by reduction in extent of range. For effective conservation, it is critical to recognize that not all range contractions are the same. We propose three distinct patterns of range contraction: shrinkage, amputation, and fragmentation. We tested the impact of these patterns on populations of a generalist species using forward-time simulations. All three patterns caused 86–88% reduction in population abundance and significantly increased average relatedness, with differing patterns in declines of nucleotide diversity relative to the contraction pattern. The fragmentation pattern resulted in the strongest effects on post-contraction genetic diversity and structure. Defining and quantifying range contraction patterns and their consequences for Earth’s biodiversity would provide useful and necessary information to combat biological annihilation.
Journal Article
Where the toad crosses the road: multi-method and cross-taxa Texas herpetofauna roadkill modeling for conservation planning
by
Voltura, Elise Varaela
,
Chyn, Kristina
,
Tracy, James L
in
Accuracy
,
Bufo houstonensis
,
Bufo nebulifer
2024
Herpetofauna are globally declining but often overlooked in conservation efforts. Since many herpetofauna are susceptible to localized road mortality, we develop the first North American herpetofauna roadkill models to inform conservation planning. The iNaturalist Roadkills of Texas database is employed to develop and compare ensembles of feature-selected MaxEnt species distribution models (SDMs) and kernel density estimate models (KDEMs) of roadkill, including broad-taxa models (btSDMs and btKDEMs) of combined Texas herpetofauna, and single-species models for the state threatened Texas Horned Lizard (Phrynosoma cornutum) and common generalist Gulf Coast Toad (Incilius nebulifer). We also novelly evaluate cross-taxa roadkill models (ctSDMs; ctKDEMs) using both broad-taxa (bctSDMs; bctKDEMs) and single-species (sctSDMs; sctKDEMs) models, assessing how well models for one taxa project sympatric roadkill of individual species, including two rare herpetofauna with insufficient data for modeling: the state threatened Texas Tortoise (Gopherus berlandieri) and federally endangered Houston Toad (Anaxyrus houstonensis). Texas herpetofauna MaxEnt roadkill btSDMs and Texas Horned Lizard roadkill SDMs both outperformed corresponding poor accuracy KDEMs. Gulf Coast Toad MaxEnt roadkill SDMs and KDEMs had poor accuracy, but KDEMs had lower complexity. Texas herpetofauna roadkill bctSDMs had excellent and significantly highest accuracy in projecting cross-taxa roadkill for the Texas Horned Lizard and Texas Tortoise. Texas herpetofauna roadkill bctSDMs also best projected Houston Toad roadkill. Important MaxEnt SDM variables included distance to residential roads, human population density, percent cover developed open space, and live herpetofauna KDE. Texas herpetofauna bctSDMs can guide further roadkill surveys needed to improve models and develop mitigation plans for herpetofauna conservation.
Journal Article
Phylogeographic structure of the dunes sagebrush lizard, an endemic habitat specialist
by
Painter, Charles W.
,
Chan, Lauren M.
,
Ryberg, Wade A.
in
Animal behavior
,
Biodiversity
,
Biological evolution
2020
Phylogeographic divergence and population genetic diversity within species reflect the impacts of habitat connectivity, demographics, and landscape level processes in both the recent and distant past. Characterizing patterns of differentiation across the geographic range of a species provides insight on the roles of organismal and environmental traits in evolutionary divergence and future population persistence. This is particularly true of habitat specialists where habitat availability and resource dependence may result in pronounced genetic structure as well as increased population vulnerability. We use DNA sequence data as well as microsatellite genotypes to estimate range-wide phylogeographic divergence, historical population connectivity, and historical demographics in an endemic habitat specialist, the dunes sagebrush lizard (Sceloporus arenicolus). This species is found exclusively in dune blowouts and patches of open sand within the shinnery oak-sand dune ecosystem of southeastern New Mexico and adjacent Texas. We find evidence of phylogeographic structure consistent with breaks and constrictions in suitable habitat at the range-wide scale. In addition, we find support for a dynamic and variable evolutionary history across the range of S. arenicolus. Populations in the Monahans Sandhills have deeply divergent lineages consistent with long-term demographic stability. In contrast, populations in the Mescalero Sands are not highly differentiated, though we do find evidence of demographic expansion in some regions and relative demographic stability in others. Phylogeographic history and population genetic differentiation in this species has been shaped by the configuration of habitat patches within a geologically complex and historically dynamic landscape. Our findings identify regions as genetically distinctive conservation units as well as underscore the genetic and demographic history of different lineages of S. arenicolus.
Journal Article
Landscape composition, not connectivity, determines metacommunity structure across multiple scales
2016
Metacommunities occupy landscapes, yet few studies of metacommunity structure consider contributions of multiple landscape elements explicitly. Previous studies have focused on measures of focal habitat connectivity as proxies for dispersal to distinguish among alternative metacommunity models. However, it is also clear that dispersal of species and metacommunity structure are also shaped by landscape composition and configuration. Slow integration of explicit landscape heterogeneity into the metacommunity concept has both limited our understanding of how landscape–dispersal interactions shape metacommunity structure and constrained the practical relevance of metacommunity theory. In this study, we encourage integration by developing an approach that characterizes how multiple landscape elements simultaneously contribute to metacommunity structure. We demonstrate the utility of this approach by characterizing how landscape heterogeneity shapes metacommunity structure of lizards at multiple spatial scales in the Mescalero Sands. We found diversity and spatial configuration of habitats in the surrounding landscape matrix best explained the pattern of nested subsets with clumped species loss observed in this lizard metacommunity across scales. Although our analyses included connectivity metrics for focal habitats, they were not shown to be important at any scale in this study. Our results were consistent with mass effects models of metacommunity theory as interpreted through landscape contrast. By integrating explicit landscape heterogeneity into the metacommunity framework, our approach provided a spatially explicit description of how and where landscape–dispersal interactions shaped metacommunity structure across scales and is directly applicable to many systems, especially those with indistinct boundaries. Our approach complements other analytical methods designed to tease apart relative roles of environmental filtering and spatial structure in metacommunity data. Finally, our approach enhances the practical relevance of metacommunity theory for future research in ecosystems subject to increasing landscape contrast as environments continue to be fragmented, habitats become further degraded and homogenized, and matrix habitats become more inhospitable.
Journal Article
Modeling the distributions of tegu lizards in native and potential invasive ranges
by
Jarnevich, Catherine S
,
Naretto, Sergio
,
Collier, Michelle A. M
in
631/158/2178
,
631/158/852
,
Ecosystems
2018
Invasive reptilian predators can have substantial impacts on native species and ecosystems. Tegu lizards are widely distributed in South America east of the Andes, and are popular in the international live animal trade. Two species are established in Florida (U.S.A.) -
Salvator merianae
(Argentine black and white tegu) and
Tupinambis teguixin sensu lato
(gold tegu) – and a third has been recorded there—
S. rufescens
(red tegu). We built species distribution models (SDMs) using 5 approaches (logistic regression, multivariate adaptive regression splines, boosted regression trees, random forest, and maximum entropy) based on data from the native ranges. We then projected these models to North America to develop hypotheses for potential tegu distributions. Our results suggest that much of the southern United States and northern México probably contains suitable habitat for one or more of these tegu species.
Salvator rufescens
had higher habitat suitability in semi-arid areas, whereas
S. merianae
and
T. teguixin
had higher habitat suitability in more mesic areas. We propose that Florida is not the only state where these taxa could become established, and that early detection and rapid response programs targeting tegu lizards in potentially suitable habitat elsewhere in North America could help prevent establishment and abate negative impacts on native ecosystems.
Journal Article
Incorporating Sociocultural Phenomena into Ecosystem-Service Valuation
by
FITZGERALD, LEE A.
,
IBARRA, SONIA
,
GRANEK, ELISE F.
in
Annan geovetenskap och miljövetenskap
,
case studies
,
economic valuation
2017
Ecosystem-services scholarship has largely focused on monetary valuation and the material contributions of ecosystems to human well-being. Increasingly, research is calling for a deeper understanding of how less tangible, nonmaterial values shape management and stakeholder decisions. We propose a framework that characterizes a suite of sociocultural phenomena rooted in key social science disciplines that are currently underrepresented in the ecosystem-services literature. The results from three example studies are presented to demonstrate how the tenets of this conceptual model can be applied in practice. We consider the findings from these studies in light of three priorities for future research: (1) complexities in individual and social functioning, (2) the salience and specificity of the perceived benefits of nature, and (3) distinctions among value concepts. We also pose a series of questions to stimulate reflection on how ecosystem-services research can adopt more pluralistic viewpoints that accommodate different forms of knowledge and its acquisition.
Journal Article
Integrating Multiple Distribution Models to Guide Conservation Efforts of an Endangered Toad
by
Fisher, Robert N.
,
Fitzgerald, Lee A.
,
Treglia, Michael L.
in
Accuracy
,
Animals
,
Biodegradation
2015
Species distribution models are used for numerous purposes such as predicting changes in species' ranges and identifying biodiversity hotspots. Although implications of distribution models for conservation are often implicit, few studies use these tools explicitly to inform conservation efforts. Herein, we illustrate how multiple distribution models developed using distinct sets of environmental variables can be integrated to aid in identification sites for use in conservation. We focus on the endangered arroyo toad (Anaxyrus californicus), which relies on open, sandy streams and surrounding floodplains in southern California, USA, and northern Baja California, Mexico. Declines of the species are largely attributed to habitat degradation associated with vegetation encroachment, invasive predators, and altered hydrologic regimes. We had three main goals: 1) develop a model of potential habitat for arroyo toads, based on long-term environmental variables and all available locality data; 2) develop a model of the species' current habitat by incorporating recent remotely-sensed variables and only using recent locality data; and 3) integrate results of both models to identify sites that may be employed in conservation efforts. We used a machine learning technique, Random Forests, to develop the models, focused on riparian zones in southern California. We identified 14.37% and 10.50% of our study area as potential and current habitat for the arroyo toad, respectively. Generally, inclusion of remotely-sensed variables reduced modeled suitability of sites, thus many areas modeled as potential habitat were not modeled as current habitat. We propose such sites could be made suitable for arroyo toads through active management, increasing current habitat by up to 67.02%. Our general approach can be employed to guide conservation efforts of virtually any species with sufficient data necessary to develop appropriate distribution models.
Journal Article