نتایج جستجو برای: captive breeding and re

تعداد نتایج: 16860702  

2006
Alex Edward Mettler John Anthony Shivik

Previous research suggests that within social animals, subordinate individuals are less neophobic than dominant individuals. We investigated the effect of social status on neophobic responses using 10 captive coyote breeding pairs. Social status was determined from observations of feeding behavior and agonistic interactions during a series of reference trials. Once dominance was established, we...

2003
Paul T. Leisnham Claire Cameron Ian G. Jamieson

Although reproductive and behavioural studies have been conducted on captive tree weta, there have been very few ecological field studies of any of the weta species involving free-ranging, marked individuals. The mountain stone weta (Hemideina maori) is a tree weta that lives on rock tors in the alpine region of the South Island of New Zealand. Over three seasons each of 480 adults and 789 juve...

2017
Guillaume Le Loc’h Mam-Noury Amadou Souley Stéphane Bertagnoli Mathilde C. Paul

Avian pox, a disease caused by avipoxviruses, is a major cause of decline of some endangered bird species. While its impact has been assessed in several species in the wild, effects of the disease in conservation breeding have never been studied. Houbara bustard species (Chlamydotis undulata and Chlamydotis macqueenii), whose populations declined in the last decades, have been captive bred for ...

2015
Charles D Waters Jeffrey J Hard Marine S O Brieuc David E Fast Kenneth I Warheit Robin S Waples Curtis M Knudsen William J Bosch Kerry A Naish

Captive breeding has the potential to rebuild depressed populations. However, associated genetic changes may decrease restoration success and negatively affect the adaptive potential of the entire population. Thus, approaches that minimize genetic risks should be tested in a comparative framework over multiple generations. Genetic diversity in two captive-reared lines of a species of conservati...

Journal: :Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology 2012
Meghan S Martin David J Shepherdson

Success of captive-breeding programs centers on consistent reproduction among captive animals. However, many individuals do not reproduce even when they are apparently healthy and presented with mates. Mate choice can affect multiple parameters of reproductive success, including mating success, offspring production, offspring survival, and offspring fecundity. We investigated the role of famili...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2011
Kent D Dunlap Ana C Silva Michael Chung

Environmental complexity and season both influence brain cell proliferation in adult vertebrates, but their relative importance and interaction have not been directly assessed. We examined brain cell proliferation during both the breeding and non-breeding seasons in adult male electric fish, Brachyhypopomus gauderio, exposed to three environments that differed in complexity: (1) a complex natur...

2014
Rémi Chargé Gabriele Sorci Michel Saint Jalme Loïc Lesobre Yves Hingrat Frédéric Lacroix Céline Teplitsky

Supportive breeding is one of the last resort conservation strategies to avoid species extinction. Management of captive populations is challenging because several harmful genetic processes need to be avoided. Several recommendations have been proposed to limit these deleterious effects, but empirical assessments of these strategies remain scarce. We investigated the outcome of a genetic manage...

Journal: :Current Biology 2008
Susan F. Walker Jaime Bosch Timothy Y. James Anastasia P. Litvintseva Juan Antonio Oliver Valls Samuel Piña Gerardo García Ghislaine Abadie Rosa Andrew A. Cunningham Sarah Hole Richard Griffiths Matthew C. Fisher

Captive breeding and re-introduction is integral to the recovery of many threatened species [1], but such practices carry an associated risk of introducing exotic and potentially unknown pathogens into naïve settings. Amphibians are facing a mass extinction crisis and an emerging pathogen, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, described only in 1998, is now recognised as a principal driver of these d...

Journal: :Wilderness & environmental medicine 2001
L Chanhome P Jintakune H Wilde M J Cox

A captive breeding program for venomous Thai snakes was established at the Queen Saovabha Memorial Institute at Bangkok, Thailand. This was necessary to secure a stable, healthy, and species-confirmed source of snake venom for antivenom production. In 1994, wild-caught specimens were collected, sexed, quarantined, and housed appropriately. All data in this report, with the exclusion of Table 6,...

Journal: :Emerging infectious diseases 2003
Marion S Ratterree Amelia P A Travassos da Rosa Rudolf P Bohm Frank B Cogswell Kathrine M Phillippi Kevin Caillouet Shelle Schwanberger Robert E Shope Robert B Tesh

During the summer of 2002, an epidemic of West Nile meningoencephalitis occurred in southern Louisiana. Following the outbreak, blood samples were collected from 1,692 captive rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta), pigtail macaques (M. nemestrina), and baboons (Papio spp.) that were permanently housed outdoors at a nonhuman primate breeding facility in St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana. The serum samples...

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