Elena Preda
University of Bucharest
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Publication
Featured researches published by Elena Preda.
Journal of Animal Ecology | 2008
Brendan G. McKie; Guy Woodward; S Hladyz; Marius Nistorescu; Elena Preda; C Popescu; Paul S. Giller; Björn Malmqvist
1. The diversity of species traits in a biological assemblage varies not only with species richness, but also with species evenness and organism density, which together influence the concentration of traits within functional guilds. Potential trait diversity at local scales is also constrained by the regional species pool. Implications of such variation for spatio-temporal variability in biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationships are likely to be complex, but are poorly understood. 2. In microcosm experiments conducted at laboratories in Sweden, Ireland and Romania, we investigated effects of species richness, evenness and density of stream-living detritivores on two related processes: detritivore leaf-processing efficiency (LPE) and growth. Assemblage composition varied among laboratories: one taxonomic order (Plecoptera) was studied in Sweden, whereas two orders, encompassing wider trait variation, were studied in Romania (Trichoptera and Plecoptera) and Ireland (Trichoptera and Isopoda). 3. Relationships between density and both LPE and growth ranged from negative to positive across the study species, highlighting the potential for density-dependent variation in process rates to alter ecosystem functioning, but indicating that such effects depend on species identity. 4. LPE varied with species diversity in the two more heterogeneous assemblages, but whereas LPE in the Romanian study was generally enhanced as richness increased, LPE in the Irish study increased only in less-even polycultures dominated by particular species. Transgressive overyielding was detected in the Irish experiment, indicating complementary resource use and/or facilitation (complementarity). These mechanisms could not be distinguished from the selection effect in the Romanian study. 5. Growth was elevated in Romanian species mixtures, reflecting positive complementarity, but lower than expected growth in some Swedish mixtures was associated with negative complementarity, indicating interspecific interference competition. 6. Our results emphasize the potential importance of detritivore diversity for stream ecosystem functioning, but both the effects of diversity on the studied processes, and the mechanisms underlying those effects, were specific to each assemblage and process. Such variability highlights challenges in generalizing impacts of diversity change for functional integrity in streams and other ecosystems in which the occurrence of important species traits fluctuates over relatively small spatio-temporal scales.
Advances in Ecological Research | 2011
Sally Hladyz; Kajsa Åbjörnsson; Eric Chauvet; Michael Dobson; Arturo Elosegi; Verónica Ferreira; Tadeusz Fleituch; Mark O. Gessner; Paul S. Giller; Vladislav Gulis; Stephen A. Hutton; Jean O. Lacoursière; Sylvain Lamothe; Antoine Lecerf; Björn Malmqvist; Brendan G. McKie; Marius Nistorescu; Elena Preda; Miira P. Riipinen; Geta Rîşnoveanu; Markus Schindler; Scott D. Tiegs; Lena B. M. Vought; Guy Woodward
The loss of native riparian vegetation and its replacement with non-native species or grazing land for agriculture is a worldwide phenomenon, but one that is prevalent in Europe, reflecting the heavily-modified nature of the continents landscape. The consequences of these riparian alterations for freshwater ecosystems remain largely unknown, largely because bioassessment has traditionally focused on the impacts of organic pollution on community structure. We addressed the need for a broader perspective, which encompasses changes at the catchment scale, by comparing ecosystem processes in woodland reference sites with those with altered riparian zones. We assessed a range of riparian modifications, including clearance for pasture and replacement of woodland with a range of low diversity plantations, in 100 streams to obtain a continental-scale perspective of the major types of alterations across Europe. Subsequently, we focused on pasture streams, as an especially prevalent widespread riparian alteration, by characterising their structural (e.g. invertebrate and fish communities) and functional (e.g. litter decomposition, algal production, herbivory) attributes in a country (Ireland) dominated by this type of landscape modification, via field and laboratory experiments. We found that microbes became increasingly important as agents of decomposition relative to macrofauna (invertebrates) in impacted sites in general and in pasture streams in particular. Resource quality of grass litter (e.g., carbon : nutrient ratios, lignin and cellulose content) was a key driver of decomposition rates in pasture streams. These systems also relied more heavily on autochthonous algal production than was the case in woodland streams, which were more detrital based. These findings suggest that these pasture streams might be fundamentally different from their native, ancestral woodland state, with a shift towards greater reliance on autochthonous-based processes. This could have a destabilizing effect on the dynamics of the food web relative to the slower, detrital-based pathways that dominate in woodland streams.
Ekologia | 2014
Jan Dick; Amani Al-Assaf; Christopher Andrews; Ricardo Díaz-Delgado; Elli Groner; Ľuboš Halada; Zita Izakovičová; Miklos Kertesz; Fares Khoury; Dušanka Krašić; Kinga Krauze; Giorgio Matteucci; Viesturs Melecis; Michael Mirtl; Daniel E. Orenstein; Elena Preda; Margarida Santos-Reis; R.I. Smith; Angheluta Vadineanu; Sanja Veselić; Petteri Vihervaara
Abstract The identification of parameters to monitor the ecosystem services delivered at a site is fundamental to the concept’s adoption as a useful policy instrument at local, national and international scales. In this paper we (i) describe the process of developing a rapid comprehensive ecosystem service assessment methodology and (ii) test the applicability of the protocol at 35 long-term research (LTER) sites across 14 countries in the LTER-Europe network (www.lter-europe.net) including marine, urban, agricultural, forest, desert and conservation sites. An assessment of probability of occurrence with estimated confidence score using 83 ecosystem service parameters was tested. The parameters were either specific services like food production or proxies such as human activities which were considered surrogates for cultural diversity and economic activity. This initial test of the ecosystem service parameter list revealed that the parameters tested were relatively easy to score by site managers with a high level of certainty (92% scored as either occurring or not occurring at the site with certainty of over 90%). Based on this assessment, we concluded that (i) this approach to operationalise the concept of ecosystem services is practical and applicable by many sectors of civil society as a first screen of the ecosystem services present at a site, (ii) this study has direct relevance to land management and policy decision makers as a transparent vehicle to focus testing scenarios and target data gathering, but (iii) further work beyond the scale investigated here is required to ensure global applicability.
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2012
Ovidiu Badea; Andrzej Bytnerowicz; Diana Silaghi; Stefan Neagu; Ion Barbu; Carmen Iacoban; Corneliu Iacob; Gheorghe Guiman; Elena Preda; Ioan Seceleanu; Marian Oneata; Ion Dumitru; Viorela Huber; Horia Iuncu; Lucian Dinca; Stefan Leca; Ioan Taut
Air pollution, bulk precipitation, throughfall, soil condition, foliar nutrients, as well as forest health and growth were studied in 2006–2009 in a long-term ecological research (LTER) network in the Bucegi Mountains, Romania. Ozone (O3) was high indicating a potential for phytotoxicity. Ammonia (NH3) concentrations rose to levels that could contribute to deposition of nutritional nitrogen (N) and could affect biodiversity changes. Higher that 50% contribution of acidic rain (pH < 5.5) contributed to increased acidity of forest soils. Foliar N concentrations for Norway spruce (Picea abies), Silver fir (Abies alba), Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris), and European beech (Fagus sylvatica) were normal, phosphorus (P) was high, while those of potassium (K), magnesium (Mg), and especially of manganese (Mn) were significantly below the typical European or Carpathian region levels. The observed nutritional imbalance could have negative effects on forest trees. Health of forests was moderately affected, with damaged trees (crown defoliation >25%) higher than 30%. The observed crown damage was accompanied by the annual volume losses for the entire research forest area up to 25.4%. High diversity and evenness specific to the stand type’s structures and local climate conditions were observed within the herbaceous layer, indicating that biodiversity of the vascular plant communities was not compromised.
Archive | 2008
Angheluta Vadineanu; Elena Preda
Sustainable use and development of watersheds become a major target of the national, European and global strategies and policies for sustainable development.
Archive | 2008
Angheluta Vadineanu; Brenda Rashleigh; Melike Gurel; Alpaslan Ekdal; Amir Aliyev; Angel Pérez Ruzafa; Cigdem Tavsan; Elena Preda; Eric Masson; Eugeniusz Andrulewicz; Mars Amanaliev; Nur Findik Hecan; Otuzbay Geldiyew; Sofia Gamito
ANGHELUTA VADINEANU1, BRENDA RASHLEIGH2, MELIKE GUREL3, ALPASLAN EKDAL3, AMIR ALIYEV9, ANGEL PEREZ RUZAFA4, CIǦDEM TAVŞAN3, ELENA PREDA1, ERIC MASSON5, EUGENIUSZ ANDRULEWICZ6, MARS AMANALIEV, NUR FΙNDΙK HECAN7, OTUZBAY GELDIYEW10 AND SOFIA GAMITO8 1 Department of Systems Ecology and Sustainability, University of Bucharest, Romania 2 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Athens, Georgia, USA 3 Environmental Engineering Department, Istanbul Technical University, Turkey 4 Fac. Biologia. Universidad de Murcia, Spain 5 University of Sciences and Technologies of Lille, France 6 Sea Fisheries Institute, Gdynia, Poland 7 Tubitak, Marmara Research Center, Gebze, Turkey 8 IMAR, University of Algarve, Portugal 9 Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources of the Azerbaijan Republic 10 Institute of Chemistry of State concern “Turkmenhimiya”, Turkmenistan
Journal of Hydrology | 2014
Bjørn Kløve; Pertti Ala-aho; Guillaume Bertrand; Jason J. Gurdak; Hans Kupfersberger; Jens Kværner; Timo Muotka; Heikki Mykrä; Elena Preda; Pekka M. Rossi; Cintia Bertacchi Uvo; Elzie Velasco; Manuel Pulido-Velazquez
Environmental Science & Policy | 2011
Bjørn Kløve; Pertti Ala-aho; Guillaume Bertrand; Zuzana Boukalova; Ali Erturk; Nico Goldscheider; Jari Ilmonen; Nusret Karakaya; Hans Kupfersberger; Jens Kvœrner; Angela Lundberg; Marta Mileusnić; Agnieszka Moszczynska; Timo Muotka; Elena Preda; Pekka M. Rossi; Dmytro Siergieiev; Josef Šimek; Przemysław Wachniew; Vadineanu Angheluta; Anders Widerlund
Journal of Ecology | 2011
Markus Bernhardt-Römermann; Alan Gray; Adam J. Vanbergen; Laurent Bergès; Andreas Bohner; Rob W. Brooker; Luc De Bruyn; Bruno De Cinti; Thomas Dirnböck; Ulf Grandin; Alison J. Hester; Robert Kanka; Stefan Klotz; Grégory Loucougaray; Lars Lundin; Giorgio Matteucci; Ilona Mészáros; Viktor Oláh; Elena Preda; Bernard Prévosto; Juha Pykälä; Wolfgang Schmidt; Michele E. Taylor; Angheluta Vadineanu; Theresa Waldmann; Jutta Stadler
Environmental Science & Policy | 2011
Bjørn Kløve; Andrew Allan; Guillaume Bertrand; Elzbieta Druzynska; Ali Erturk; Nico Goldscheider; Sarah Henry; Nusret Karakaya; Timo P. Karjalainen; Phoebe Koundouri; Hans Kupfersberger; Jens Kvœrner; Angela Lundberg; Timo Muotka; Elena Preda; Manuel Pulido-Velazquez; Peter Schipper