National Repository of Grey Literature 8 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
The relationships between diversity patterns and community abundance
Dlouhá, Hana ; Storch, David (advisor) ; Keil, Petr (referee)
Increase in the number of species with area is one of the most studied ecological patterns. There is a considerable amount of literature devoted to this question. The rate of increase in the species diversity with area isn't equal at all the spatial scales, as shown by empirical studies. On the finest and coarsest scales, there is distinctively higher rate of increase than on the middle (regional) scales. These distinctions were attributed to many characteristics of environment, taxon etc. There is a possibility to explain the variability of this particular rate by mean species abundance. This work focuses on summarizing the relationships between the rate of increase in biodiversity with area, factors that influence it and mean species abundance.
Effect of floral rewards on specialization of hoverflies (Diptera, Syrphidae) in meadows of Železné hory
Filip, Jan ; Tropek, Robert (advisor) ; Keil, Petr (referee)
Traditionally managed temperate semi-natural meadows are generally considered as one of the most diverse habitats worldwide. During the past decades, management changes and abandonment of meadows pose serious threats to communities of both flowering plants and pollinators. However, the extent to which are pollinators affected by changes in floral resources still remain unknown. To investigate the effect of floral resources on visitation specialization, species richness and abundance of hoverflies, pollination networks from 13 meadows in the Železné hory PLA were constructed and analysed. Moreover, patterns were recorded on two spatial scales, in transects and in the whole meadows. To specify the specialization of hoverfly pollinators, unvisited plant species and all resources present on a site (transect/meadow), offered by plants as floral abundance and nectar rewards, was added in the networks. Relationships between plant species richness, floral abundance and nectar sugar production were positively correlated with visitation specialization of hoverflies on the meadow scale. Species richness and abundance of hoverflies was affected by floral resources on the transect scale, unlike the specialization of hoverflies. The usage of extended network indices may act as an improvement towards the better...
Universality in biodiversity trends
Bohdalková, Eliška ; Storch, David (advisor) ; Keil, Petr (referee)
Biodiversity trends (such as the relationship between species richness and temperature or productivity) are always defined for a particular taxon at a specific area (the entire range of the taxon or often just a region arbitrarily chosen by researchers). The form of these trends varies between taxa and regions. The weak relationship between richness and temperature or productivity is sometimes interpreted as a counterevidence for the hypothesis explaining diversity patterns by these variables. However, the delimitation of taxa or region may play a crucial role for the form of the trends. The aim of this thesis is to determine whether some taxon properties (its size) or region properties (its area, range of explanatory variables, the temperature-productivity relationship or average temperature) affect the strength and slope of the richness-temperature and richness-productivity relationships. 46 data sets of species richness for a wide range of plants, invertebrates and ectothermic vertebrates within different regions of the world were used for the analysis. While the taxon size is likely to affect the strength and slope of the relationship when comparing individual (nested) subclades within larger clade, the comparison of different taxa in different regions of the world shows only the effect of the region...
Spatial Variability in Pollination Networks
Hadrava, Jiří ; Janšta, Petr (advisor) ; Keil, Petr (referee)
Plant-pollinator interaction assembly can be represented as so called pollination network. Using these networks, assembly of plant-pollinator communities and geographic patterns in pollination networks can be studied. During last years, a great progress in describing patterns in structure of plant-pollinator interaction webs and in describing their spatial variability was made. However, these results are mostly based on data from previous studies, which are not seamlessly comparable due to their nonuniformity. My thesis aims at the methodological concepts of study on pollination networks. Based on meta- analysis of previously published data and on data from four years detailed study of plant-pollination system from one locality, I show several methodological problems caused by dissimilarities in sam- pling method of current pollination-network data. These dissimilarities could be responsible for some observed patterns in the assembly of pollination networks. Thus, I propose a uniform method for observing pollination networks suitable for macroecolo- gical meta-analyses (pollination network samples). I tested this method in the field and I described 49 pollination networks from the central and eastern Europe by using such method. In these ne- tworks, no nonrandom structure character such as...
Community ecology from the perspective of classic and bayesian statistics
Klimeš, Adam ; Keil, Petr (advisor) ; Herben, Tomáš (referee)
Community ecology from the perspective of classic and Bayesian statistics Ekologie společenstev z hlediska klasické a Bayesovské statistiky Řešitel: Adam Klimeš Vedoucí práce: Mgr. Petr Keil, Ph.D. Abstract Quantitative evaluation of evidence through statistics is a central part of present-day science. Bayesian approach represents an emerging but rapidly developing enrichment of statistical analysis. The approach differs in its foundations from the classic methods. These differences, such as the different interpretation of probability, are often seen as obstacles for acceptance of Bayesian approach. In this thesis I outline ways to deal with the assumptions of Bayesian approach, and I address the main objections against it. I present Bayesian approach as a new way to handle data to answer scientific questions. I do this from a standpoint of community ecology: I illustrate the novelty that Bayesian approach brings to data analysis of typical community ecology data, specifically, the analysis of multivariate datasets. I focus on principal component analysis, one of the typical and frequently used analytical techniques. I execute Bayesian analyses that are analogical to the classic principal components analysis, I report the advantages of the Bayesian version, such as the possibility of working with...
The relationships between diversity patterns and community abundance
Dlouhá, Hana ; Storch, David (advisor) ; Keil, Petr (referee)
Increase in the number of species with area is one of the most studied ecological patterns. There is a considerable amount of literature devoted to this question. The rate of increase in the species diversity with area isn't equal at all the spatial scales, as shown by empirical studies. On the finest and coarsest scales, there is distinctively higher rate of increase than on the middle (regional) scales. These distinctions were attributed to many characteristics of environment, taxon etc. There is a possibility to explain the variability of this particular rate by mean species abundance. This work focuses on summarizing the relationships between the rate of increase in biodiversity with area, factors that influence it and mean species abundance.
Macroecology of European invertebrates:temporal and spatial patterns extracted from heterogeneous data
Keil, Petr ; Storch, David (advisor) ; Lepš, Jan (referee) ; Kindlmann, Pavel (referee)
Univerzita Karlova v Praze Přírodovědecká fakulta Katedra ekologie Makroekologie evropských bezobratlých: časové a prostorové patrnosti dobývané z heterogenních dat Autoreferát dizertační práce Petr Keil Školitel: Doc. David Storch, Ph.D. Praha 2010 Charles University in Prague Faculty of Science Department of Ecology Macroecology of European invertebrates: temporal and spatial patterns extracted from heterogeneous data Ph.D. thesis - summary Petr Keil Supervisor: Doc. David Storch, Ph.D. Prague 2010 SOUHRN Dizertační práce obsahuje pět kapitol. První čtyři kapitoly jsou věnovány několika aspektům makroekologie evropského hmyzu, jako jsou geografické a časové patrnosti druhového bohatsví. Pátá kapitola zkoumá některé makroekologické charakteristiky populační dynamiky v rámci neutrální teorie biodiverzity. Dizertace je opatřena úvodem, který se věnuje zejména metodickým problémům společným pro většinu kapitol. V Kapitolách I a II jsem se zabýval rozmístěním druhového bohatství pestřenek (Insecta: Diptera: Syrphidae) a vážek (Insecta: Odonata) napříč Evropou. Obě práce ukazují absenci jednoduchého poklesu druhového bohatství od jihu k severu. Druhově nejbohatší jsou horské oblasti kolem Středozemního moře, od kterých směrem na jih a na sever diverzita klesá. V obou případech se jako důležité proměnné...

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