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Dive into the research topics where Hans Baveco is active.

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Featured researches published by Hans Baveco.


Science of The Total Environment | 2012

The role of ecological models in linking ecological risk assessment to ecosystem services in agroecosystems

Nika Galic; Amelie Schmolke; Valery E. Forbes; Hans Baveco; Paul J. Van den Brink

Agricultural practices are essential for sustaining the human population, but at the same time they can directly disrupt ecosystem functioning. Ecological risk assessment (ERA) aims to estimate possible adverse effects of human activities on ecosystems and their parts. Current ERA practices, however, incorporate very little ecology and base the risk estimates on the results of standard tests with several standard species. The main obstacles for a more ecologically relevant ERA are the lack of clear protection goals and the inherent complexity of ecosystems that is hard to approach empirically. In this paper, we argue that the ecosystem services framework offers an opportunity to define clear and ecologically relevant protection goals. At the same time, ecological models provide the tools to address ecological complexity to the degree needed to link measurement endpoints and ecosystem services, and to quantify service provision and possible adverse effects from human activities. We focus on the ecosystem services relevant for agroecosystem functioning, including pollination, biocontrol and eutrophication effects and present modeling studies relevant for quantification of each of the services. The challenges of the ecosystem services approach are discussed as well as the limitations of ecological models in the context of ERA. A broad, multi-stakeholder dialog is necessary to aid the definition of protection goals in terms of services delivered by ecosystems and their parts. The need to capture spatio-temporal dynamics and possible interactions among service providers pose challenges for ecological models as a basis for decision making. However, we argue that both fields are advancing quickly and can prove very valuable in achieving more ecologically relevant ERA.


Irrigation and Drainage Systems | 2002

Corridors and species dispersal

C.C. Vos; Hans Baveco

After introducing corridor concepts, we explore how those concepts have been applied and whether the applications were effective. Based on empirical data, simulation models, and on-the-ground applications, general principles for developing effective corridors will be presented. In the last two sections, major knowledge gaps and research approaches for filling them are discussed.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Persistence of aquatic insects across managed landscapes: effects of landscape permeability on re-colonization and population recovery

Nika Galic; Geerten M. Hengeveld; Paul J. Van den Brink; Amelie Schmolke; Pernille Thorbek; Eric Bruns; Hans Baveco

Human practices in managed landscapes may often adversely affect aquatic biota, such as aquatic insects. Dispersal is often the limiting factor for successful re-colonization and recovery of stressed habitats. Therefore, in this study, we evaluated the effects of landscape permeability, assuming a combination of riparian vegetation (edge permeability) and other vegetation (landscape matrix permeability), and distance between waterbodies on the colonization and recovery potential of weakly flying insects. For this purpose, we developed two models, a movement and a population model of the non-biting midge, Chironomus riparius, an aquatic insect with weak flying abilities. With the movement model we predicted the outcome of dispersal in a landscape with several linear water bodies (ditches) under different assumptions regarding landscape-dependent movement. Output from the movement model constituted the probabilities of encountering another ditch and of staying in the natal ditch or perishing in the landscape matrix, and was used in the second model. With this individual-based model of midge populations, we assessed the implications for population persistence and for recovery potential after an extreme stress event. We showed that a combination of landscape attributes from the movement model determines the fate of dispersing individuals and, once extrapolated to the population level, has a big impact on the persistence and recovery of populations. Population persistence benefited from low edge permeability as it reduced the dispersal mortality which was the main factor determining population persistence and viability. However, population recovery benefited from higher edge permeability, but this was conditional on the low effective distance that ensured fewer losses in the landscape matrix. We discuss these findings with respect to possible landscape management scenarios.


Environment International | 2015

Theoretically exploring direct and indirect chemical effects across ecological and exposure scenarios using mechanistic fate and effects modelling

F. De Laender; Melissa Morselli; Hans Baveco; P.J. van den Brink; A. Di Guardo

Predicting ecosystem response to chemicals is a complex problem in ecotoxicology and a challenge for risk assessors. The variables potentially influencing chemical fate and exposure define the exposure scenario while the variables determining effects at the ecosystem level define the ecological scenario. In absence of any empirical data, the objective of this paper is to present simulations by a fugacity-based fate model and a differential equation-based ecosystem model to theoretically explore how direct and indirect effects on invertebrate shallow pond communities vary with changing ecological and exposure scenarios. These simulations suggest that direct and indirect effects are larger in mesotrophic systems than in oligotrophic systems. In both trophic states, interaction strength (quantified using grazing rates) was suggested a more important driver for the size and recovery from direct and indirect effects than immigration rate. In general, weak interactions led to smaller direct and indirect effects. For chemicals targeting mesozooplankton only, indirect effects were common in (simple) food-chains but rare in (complex) food-webs. For chemicals directly affecting microzooplankton, the dominant zooplankton group in the modelled community, indirect effects occurred both in food-chains and food-webs. We conclude that the choice of the ecological and exposure scenarios in ecotoxicological modelling efforts needs to be justified because of its influence on the prevalence and magnitude of the predicted effects. Overall, more work needs to be done to empirically test the theoretical expectations formulated here.


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2014

Modeling the contribution of toxicokinetic and toxicodynamic processes to the recovery of Gammarus pulex populations after exposure to pesticides

Nika Galic; Roman Ashauer; Hans Baveco; Anna Maija Nyman; Alpar Barsi; Pernille Thorbek; Eric Bruns; Paul J. Van den Brink

Because aquatic macroinvertebrates may be exposed regularly to pesticides in edge-of-the-field water bodies, an accurate assessment of potential adverse effects and subsequent population recovery is essential. Standard effect risk assessment tools are not able to fully address the complexities arising from multiple exposure patterns, nor can they properly address the population recovery process. In the present study, we developed an individual-based model of the freshwater amphipod Gammarus pulex to evaluate the consequences of exposure to 4 compounds with different modes of action on individual survival and population recovery. Effects on survival were calculated using concentration-effect relationships and the threshold damage model (TDM), which accounts for detailed processes of toxicokinetics and toxicodynamics. Delayed effects as calculated by the TDM had a significant impact on individual survival and population recovery. We also evaluated the standard assessment of effects after short-term exposures using the 96-h concentration-effect model and the TDM, which was conservative for very short-term exposure. An integration of a TKTD submodel with a population model can be used to explore the ecological relevance of ecotoxicity endpoints in different exposure environments.


Environmental Pollution | 2012

Contaminant exposure in relation to spatio-temporal variation in diet composition: A case study of the little owl (Athene noctua).

Aafke M. Schipper; S. Wijnhoven; Hans Baveco; Nico W. van den Brink

We assessed dietary exposure of the little owl Athene noctua to trace metal contamination in a Dutch Rhine River floodplain area. Diet composition was calculated per month for three habitat types, based on the population densities of six prey types (earthworms, ground beetles and four small mammal species) combined with the little owls functional response to these prey types. Exposure levels showed a strong positive relationship with the dietary fraction of earthworms, but also depended on the dietary fraction of common voles, with higher common vole fractions resulting in decreasing exposure levels. Spatio-temporal changes in the availability of earthworms and common voles in particular resulted in considerable variation in exposure, with peaks in exposure exceeding a tentative toxicity threshold. These findings imply that wildlife exposure assessments based on a predefined, average diet composition may considerably underestimate local or intermittent peaks in exposure.


Methods in Ecology and Evolution | 2018

Modelling mobile agent‐based ecosystem services using kernel‐weighted predictors

P.W. Goedhart; Marjolein E. Lof; F.J.J.A. Bianchi; Hans Baveco; Wopke van der Werf

1. Agriculture benefits from ecosystem services provided by mobile agents, such as biological pest control by natural enemies and pollination by bees. However, methods that can generate spatially explicit predictions and maps of these ecosystem services based on empirical data are still scarce. 2. Here we propose a generic statistical model to derive kernel functions to characterize the spatial distribution of ecosystem services provided by mobile agents. The model is similar in spirit to a generalized linear model, and uses data of landscape composition and ecosystem services assessed at target sites to estimate parameters of the kernel. The approach is tested in a simulation study and illustrated by an empirical case study on parasitism rates of the diamondback moth Plutella xylostella. 3. The simulation study shows that the scale parameter of the exponential power kernel can be estimated with limited bias, whereas estimation of the shape parameter is difficult. For the case study the model provides biologically relevant estimates for the kernel associated with parasitism of Plutella xylostella. These estimates can be used to generate ecosystem service maps for existing or planned landscapes. The case study reveals that predictions can be sensitive to the parameter values for the width and shape of the kernel, and to the link function used in the statistical model. 4. In the last two decades numerous empirical studies assessed ecosystem services at target sites and related these to the surrounding landscape. Our method can take advantage of these data by estimating underlying kernels that can be used to map the spatial distribution of ecosystem services. However, empirical data that can discriminate between alternative kernel shapes remain critical.


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2008

Adapting landscapes to climate change: examples of climate‐proof ecosystem networks and priority adaptation zones

C.C. Vos; Pam Berry; Paul Opdam; Hans Baveco; Bianca Nijhof; Jesse O’Hanley; Claire Bell; H. Kuipers


Ecological Modelling | 2014

Integrating chemical fate and population-level effect models for pesticides at landscape scale: New options for risk assessment

Andreas Focks; Mechteld ter Horst; Erik Berg; Hans Baveco; Paul J. Van den Brink


Environmental Pollution | 2012

Simulating population recovery of an aquatic isopod: Effects of timing of stress and landscape structure

Nika Galic; Hans Baveco; Geerten M. Hengeveld; Pernille Thorbek; Eric Bruns; Paul J. Van den Brink

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Nika Galic

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Paul J. Van den Brink

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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F.J.J.A. Bianchi

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Geerten M. Hengeveld

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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P.W. Goedhart

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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C.C. Vos

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Paul Opdam

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Andreas Focks

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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