Abundance and Dynamics of Small Mammals and Their Predators: 2nd Edition

A special issue of Life (ISSN 2075-1729). This special issue belongs to the section "Diversity and Ecology".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (25 December 2023) | Viewed by 333

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
BiBio Research Group, Natural Sciences Museum of Granollers, 08402 Granollers, Spain
Interests: small mammals; sampling techniques; diet of predators; landscape change; climate change; habitat selection; population dynamics; distribution and abundance; biodiversity monitoring

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Guest Editor
Laboratory of Mammalian Ecology, Nature Research Centre, Akademijos 2, 08412 Vilnius, Lithuania
Interests: hoofed, semi-aquatic, carnivore and small mammal ecology; threatened and invasive mammal species; large carnivores; spatial distribution; population management and computer modeling; biodiversity and ecological diversity
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Small mammals (rodents and insectivores) represent a numerous and eclectic group of species of different phylogenetic origin that share similar biological/ecological characteristics derived from their small size. This group is considered to play a key functional role in ecosystems worldwide, providing several benefits, such as vegetation and soil regeneration (as seed dispersers and burrowers) and being at the bottom of food webs, thus playing a central role as both predators of invertebrates and prey of medium-sized carnivores and raptors. On the other hand, they are frequently regarded as pests, especially in anthropogenic ecosystems.

Indeed, small mammals show complex and interactive top-down and bottom-up regulation of numbers of other relevant components of their communities. Being short-lived, in addition to having fast generation times and demographic responses to environmental factors, small mammals are ideal subjects to study population dynamics in time and space as compared to long-lived mammal species. In the light of environmental changes as a result of human activities, landscapes and the climate are suffering from alterations, producing range shifts and restructuration of small-mammal assemblages—now dominated by opportunistic species with poor conservation value and limited functions, leading to new management strategies for the conservation of ecosystems.

This Special Issue invites research papers on small-mammal breeding, abundance and dynamics based on time series recorded in either natural or human-altered landscapes at different spatial scales. Dynamics of predator–prey systems, from the point of view of small mammals playing the role of predators and/or prey, are especially welcome. Our scope also includes predator–small-mammal interactions and predators’ responses, both numerically and functionally, to population dynamics of small-mammal prey, as well as the role of small mammals as regulators of invertebrate pests. Manuscripts analyzing the influence of environmental change (processes of forest fragmentation, land abandonment, wildfires, successional stages, climate change, etc.) as well as the biotic/abiotic properties and functions of landscapes on population/meta-population dynamics (changes in species abundance, demography, community composition, etc.) with either theoretical or empirical perspectives are welcome.

Dr. Ignasi Torre
Dr. Linas Balčiauskas
Guest Editors

Manuscript Submission Information

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Keywords

  • small mammals
  • population dynamics
  • landscapes and habitats
  • predators

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Published Papers

There is no accepted submissions to this special issue at this moment.
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