Donald J. Macintosh
Aarhus University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Donald J. Macintosh.
Journal of Tropical Ecology | 2003
Elizabeth C. Ashton; Donald J. Macintosh; Peter J. Hogarth
Baseline ecological studies of pristine mangroves are important for monitoring, management and conservation of mangrove ecosystems. Diversity, density, biomass and community structure of crab and molluscan macrofauna were studied in a near-pristine mangrove forest in Sematan, Sarawak. In each of the nine 100-m 2 plots, six 15-min catching periods were used to collect crabs and three 1-m 2 quadrats were sampled for molluscan epifauna. Environmental variables and vegetation were also recorded in each 100-m 2 plot. Thirty-one crab species and 44 molluscan species were recorded, including a few species not previously reported from Sarawak. Crab community structure was correlated with topographical height and surface water pH and salinity. Gastropod community structure was correlated with redox potential of water at depth, topographical height, surface water pH and leaf litter. Crab community structure and species number were positively correlated with tree and seedling community structure and diversity, suggesting that the mangrove vegetation is important to the crab fauna as a habitat and food supply. Molluscan abundance was positively correlated with sapling diversity and negatively correlated with the numbers of mangrove associates and tree species. The young leaves on mangrove saplings may provide a better food source than those on mature trees or mangrove associates. The data from this study provide a valuable baseline for future use at this site and for comparison with more degraded mangrove habitats elsewhere in South-East Asia.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2004
Joachim Offenberg; Mogens Nielsen; Donald J. Macintosh; Sopon Havanon; Sanit Aksornkoae
It is well documented that ants can protect plants against insect herbivores, but the underlying mechanisms remain almost undocumented. We propose and test the pheromone avoidance hypothesis—an indirect mechanism where insect herbivores are repelled not only by ants but also by ant pheromones. Herbivores subjected to ant predation will experience a selective advantage if they evolve mechanisms enabling them to avoid feeding within ant territories. Such a mechanism could be based on the ability to detect and evade ant pheromones. Field observations and data from the literature showed that the ant Oecophylla smaragdina distributes persistent pheromones throughout its territory. In addition, a laboratory test showed that the beetle Rhyparida wallacei, which this ant preys on, was reluctant to feed on leaves sampled within ant territories compared with leaves sampled outside territories. Thus, this study provides an example of an ant–herbivore system conforming to the pheromone avoidance hypothesis.
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2003
Ole Nielsen; Erik Kristensen; Donald J. Macintosh
The impact of fiddler crabs (Uca spp.) on benthic mineralization rates and pathways in deposits of shrimp pond waste (SPW) with planted mangrove trees (Rhizophora apiculata) were determined in the Ranong mangrove forest, Thailand. Sediment metabolism, measured as CO2 flux, increased by 2- to 3-fold when either fiddler crabs or mangrove trees were present compared to control plots. Sulfate reduction rates (SRR) were always high and partitioning of various electron acceptors to total carbon oxidation revealed that sulfate reduction contributed by >90%, with iron reduction being important only near the sediment–water interface. However, significant iron reduction appeared down to 7 cm when bioturbation and plant roots were combined in the easily oxidizable mangrove sediment (MS), indicating that infaunal activity and plant roots were able to alter the substratum. Microprofiles around individual Uca burrows showed 46% lower SRRs in a 15-mm-thick oxidized layer around the burrows compared to the surrounding sediment. The burrow wall environment appears to be a zone of intense reoxidation of reduced compounds as indicated by low pools of reduced sulfide compounds and a high Fe(III) content. Despite the decreased SRRs near the burrow, and the introduction of Fe(III) to deeper sediment layers, fiddler crabs and mangrove trees have only limited impact on rates and partitioning of anaerobic carbon mineralization in the SPW. This lack of response was attributed to the relative small volume of sediment affected by crab activities.
Estuaries | 2003
Elizabeth C. Ashton; Peter J. Hogarth; Donald J. Macintosh
Brachyuran crab community structure was compared between mangrove sites under different management systems from four locations along the Melaka Straits-Andaman Sea Coast. Klong Ngao, a mangrove estuary in Ranong Province of southern Thailand, lies within a Biosphere Reserve designated in 1997. Sites were positioned in plantations at a former charcoal concession forest, a disused tin mine, and an abandoned shrimp pond along this estuary. The Merbok estuary in Kedah, Malaysia, is partially managed: the mangroves are cut for charcoal and poles on a small scale and the forests are left to regenerate naturally. The Matang Mangrove Forest Reserve in Perak, Malaysia, is heavily exploited but well managed, forRhizophora wood to produce charcoal, and has been for 100 years. Sites were positioned in plantations of different ages. Kuala Selangor Nature Park, Selangor, Malaysia, was established as a nature reserve in 1987 and contains mature mangrove forest regenerating naturally from previous selective felling. At Klong Ngao and Matang, mature reserve forest sites were also studied for comparison with plantation sites. The sites included both upstream and downstream locations and were of similar area, minimizing effects from possible species-area relationships. Sites were chosen with similar environmental conditions and with a dominance ofRhizophora spp. At each site per location, the brachyuran crabs were sampled quantitatively in 100 m2 quadrats by three independent 15-min timed crab catches. The crab community recorded was analyzed by univariate and multivariate statistical techniques. Management history plays an important role in moderating the crab community structure. The crab community also changes with the age of the mangrove forest stand. Sesarmid crabs consistently dominated in mature forests, whereas young plantations were colonized mainly by ocypodid crabs. The findings show that heavily effected sites—e.g., disused tin mining areas, former concession forests, and abandoned shrimp ponds—can be rehabilitated by planting mangroves and that the crab community is a useful ecological indicator of habitat status.
Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2002
Donald J. Macintosh; E.C. Ashton; S. Havanon
Aquaculture Research | 1997
M. C. M. Beveridge; M J Phillips; Donald J. Macintosh
Forest Ecology and Management | 2002
Elizabeth C. Ashton; Donald J. Macintosh
Journal of Crustacean Biology | 2002
J. Lynne Overton; Donald J. Macintosh
Biotropica | 2004
Joachim Offenberg; Sopon Havanon; Sanit Aksornkoae; Donald J. Macintosh; Mogens Nielsen
Fisheries Research | 2005
Sean Moser; Donald J. Macintosh; Somboon Laoprasert; Nualanong Tongdee