Joseph Tzanopoulos
University of Kent
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Featured researches published by Joseph Tzanopoulos.
Ecology Letters | 2008
Theodora Petanidou; Athanasios S. Kallimanis; Joseph Tzanopoulos; Stefanos P. Sgardelis; John D. Pantis
We analysed the dynamics of a plant-pollinator interaction network of a scrub community surveyed over four consecutive years. Species composition within the annual networks showed high temporal variation. Temporal dynamics were also evident in the topology of the network, as interactions among plants and pollinators did not remain constant through time. This change involved both the number and the identity of interacting partners. Strikingly, few species and interactions were consistently present in all four annual plant-pollinator networks (53% of the plant species, 21% of the pollinator species and 4.9% of the interactions). The high turnover in species-to-species interactions was mainly the effect of species turnover (c. 70% in pairwise comparisons among years), and less the effect of species flexibility to interact with new partners (c. 30%). We conclude that specialization in plant-pollinator interactions might be highly overestimated when measured over short periods of time. This is because many plant or pollinator species appear as specialists in 1 year, but tend to be generalists or to interact with different partner species when observed in other years. The high temporal plasticity in species composition and interaction identity coupled with the low variation in network structure properties (e.g. degree centralization, connectance, nestedness, average distance and network diameter) imply (i) that tight and specialized coevolution might not be as important as previously suggested and (ii) that plant-pollinator interaction networks might be less prone to detrimental effects of disturbance than previously thought. We suggest that this may be due to the opportunistic nature of plant and animal species regarding the available partner resources they depend upon at any particular time.
Global Change Biology | 2015
Maria A. Tsiafouli; Elisa Thébault; Stefanos P. Sgardelis; Peter C. de Ruiter; Wim H. van der Putten; Klaus Birkhofer; Lia Hemerik; Franciska T. de Vries; Richard D. Bardgett; Mark Brady; Lisa Bjørnlund; Helene Bracht Jørgensen; Søren Christensen; Tina D’Hertefeldt; Stefan Hotes; W. H. Gera Hol; Jan Frouz; Mira Liiri; Simon R. Mortimer; Heikki Setälä; Joseph Tzanopoulos; Karoline Uteseny; Václav Pižl; Josef Stary; Volkmar Wolters; Katarina Hedlund
Soil biodiversity plays a key role in regulating the processes that underpin the delivery of ecosystem goods and services in terrestrial ecosystems. Agricultural intensification is known to change the diversity of individual groups of soil biota, but less is known about how intensification affects biodiversity of the soil food web as a whole, and whether or not these effects may be generalized across regions. We examined biodiversity in soil food webs from grasslands, extensive, and intensive rotations in four agricultural regions across Europe: in Sweden, the UK, the Czech Republic and Greece. Effects of land-use intensity were quantified based on structure and diversity among functional groups in the soil food web, as well as on community-weighted mean body mass of soil fauna. We also elucidate land-use intensity effects on diversity of taxonomic units within taxonomic groups of soil fauna. We found that between regions soil food web diversity measures were variable, but that increasing land-use intensity caused highly consistent responses. In particular, land-use intensification reduced the complexity in the soil food webs, as well as the community-weighted mean body mass of soil fauna. In all regions across Europe, species richness of earthworms, Collembolans, and oribatid mites was negatively affected by increased land-use intensity. The taxonomic distinctness, which is a measure of taxonomic relatedness of species in a community that is independent of species richness, was also reduced by land-use intensification. We conclude that intensive agriculture reduces soil biodiversity, making soil food webs less diverse and composed of smaller bodied organisms. Land-use intensification results in fewer functional groups of soil biota with fewer and taxonomically more closely related species. We discuss how these changes in soil biodiversity due to land-use intensification may threaten the functioning of soil in agricultural production systems.
Pedosphere | 2008
Juying Jiao; Joseph Tzanopoulos; Panteleimon Xofis; Jonathan Mitchley
A study was conducted in the forest-steppe region of the Loess Plateau to provide insight into the factors affecting the process of vegetation establishment, and to provide recommendations for the selection of indigenous species in order to speed up the succession process and to allow the establishment of vegetation more resistant to soil erosion. Four distinctive vegetation types were identified, and their distribution was affected not only by the time since abandonment but also by other environmental factors, mainly soil water and total P in the upper soil layers. One of the vegetation types, dominated by Artemisia scoparia, formed the early successional stage after abandonment while the other three types formed later successional stages with their distribution determined by the soil water content and total P. It can be concluded that the selection of appropriate species for introduction to accelerate succession should be determined by the local conditions and especially the total P concentration and soil water content.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Nicola K. Abram; Panteleimon Xofis; Joseph Tzanopoulos; Douglas C. MacMillan; Marc Ancrenaz; Robin Chung; Lucy Peter; Robert C. Ong; Isabelle Lackman; Benoit Goossens; Laurentius Ambu; Andrew W. Knight
Lowland tropical forests are increasingly threatened with conversion to oil palm as global demand and high profit drives crop expansion throughout the world’s tropical regions. Yet, landscapes are not homogeneous and regional constraints dictate land suitability for this crop. We conducted a regional study to investigate spatial and economic components of forest conversion to oil palm within a tropical floodplain in the Lower Kinabatangan, Sabah, Malaysian Borneo. The Kinabatangan ecosystem harbours significant biodiversity with globally threatened species but has suffered forest loss and fragmentation. We mapped the oil palm and forested landscapes (using object-based-image analysis, classification and regression tree analysis and on-screen digitising of high-resolution imagery) and undertook economic modelling. Within the study region (520,269 ha), 250,617 ha is cultivated with oil palm with 77% having high Net-Present-Value (NPV) estimates (
Water Research | 2010
Danyel Hampson; John Crowther; Ian J. Bateman; David Kay; Paulette Posen; Carl Michael Stapleton; Mark D. Wyer; Carlo Fezzi; Philip Jones; Joseph Tzanopoulos
413/ha− yr–
Biodiversity and Conservation | 2015
Athanasios S. Kallimanis; Konstantinos Touloumis; Joseph Tzanopoulos; Antonios D. Mazaris; Evangelia Apostolopoulou; Sofia Stefanidou; Anna V. Scott; Simon G. Potts; John D. Pantis
637/ha− yr); but 20.5% is under-producing. In fact 6.3% (15,810 ha) of oil palm is commercially redundant (with negative NPV of
PLOS ONE | 2016
Nicola K. Abram; Douglas C. MacMillan; Panteleimon Xofis; Marc Ancrenaz; Joseph Tzanopoulos; Robert Ong; Benoit Goossens; Lian Pin Koh; Christian Del Valle; Lucy Peter; Alexandra Morel; Isabelle Lackman; Robin Chung; Harjinder Kler; Laurentius Ambu; William Baya; Andrew T. Knight
-299/ha− yr-
Nature and Conservation | 2014
Yrjö Haila; Klaus Henle; Evangelia Apostolopoulou; Joanna Cent; Erik Framstad; Christoph Goerg; Kurt Jax; Reinhard Klenke; William Magnuson; Birgit Mueller; Riikka Paloniemi; John D. Pantis; Felix Rauschmayer; Irene Ring; Josef Settele; Jukka Similä; Konstantinos Touloumis; Joseph Tzanopoulos; Guy Pe'er
-65/ha− yr) due to palm mortality from flood inundation. These areas would have been important riparian or flooded forest types. Moreover, 30,173 ha of unprotected forest remain and despite its value for connectivity and biodiversity 64% is allocated for future oil palm. However, we estimate that at minimum 54% of these forests are unsuitable for this crop due to inundation events. If conversion to oil palm occurs, we predict a further 16,207 ha will become commercially redundant. This means that over 32,000 ha of forest within the floodplain would have been converted for little or no financial gain yet with significant cost to the ecosystem. Our findings have globally relevant implications for similar floodplain landscapes undergoing forest transformation to agriculture such as oil palm. Understanding landscape level constraints to this crop, and transferring these into policy and practice, may provide conservation and economic opportunities within these seemingly high opportunity cost landscapes.
Biodiversity and Conservation | 2008
Antonios D. Mazaris; Joseph Tzanopoulos; Athanasios S. Kallimanis; Stephanos P. Sgardelis; John D. Pantis
The Water Framework Directive has caused a paradigm shift towards the integrated management of recreational water quality through the development of drainage basin-wide programmes of measures. This has increased the need for a cost-effective diagnostic tool capable of accurately predicting riverine faecal indicator organism (FIO) concentrations. This paper outlines the application of models developed to fulfil this need, which represent the first transferrable generic FIO models to be developed for the UK to incorporate direct measures of key FIO sources (namely human and livestock population data) as predictor variables. We apply a recently developed transfer methodology, which enables the quantification of geometric mean presumptive faecal coliforms and presumptive intestinal enterococci concentrations for base- and high-flow during the summer bathing season in unmonitored UK watercourses, to predict FIO concentrations in the Humber river basin district. Because the FIO models incorporate explanatory variables which allow the effects of policy measures which influence livestock stocking rates to be assessed, we carry out empirical analysis of the differential effects of seven land use management and policy instruments (fiscal constraint, production constraint, cost intervention, area intervention, demand-side constraint, input constraint, and micro-level land use management) all of which can be used to reduce riverine FIO concentrations. This research provides insights into FIO source apportionment, explores a selection of pollution remediation strategies and the spatial differentiation of land use policies which could be implemented to deliver river quality improvements. All of the policy tools we model reduce FIO concentrations in rivers but our research suggests that the installation of streamside fencing in intensive milk producing areas may be the single most effective land management strategy to reduce riverine microbial pollution.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Valeria Boron; Joseph Tzanopoulos; Jenny Gallo; Jorge Barragan; Laura Jaimes-Rodriguez; George B. Schaller; Esteban Payan
EU conservation policy is primarily based on the Natura 2000 network of protected areas (PAs). We analyzed the land-cover changes between 2000 and 2006 inside 25,703 Natura 2000 sites in 24 EU Member States, and compared them with those observed outside the PAs. At the EU level, ‘Artificial surfaces’ and ‘Agricultural areas’ exhibit lower rates of transformation within PAs than outside. ‘Forests and semi-natural areas’ marginally increased inside PAs, while they marginally decreased outside. In States that joined the EU before 2000, landscape transformation rates were low, and inside PAs ‘Forest’ preservation was accompanied with a shift from intensive agricultural practices ‘Permanent arable land’ to more diverse ‘Agricultural mosaics’. In new Member States (most of them located in Eastern Europe), there was agricultural abandonment, with conversion to ‘Artificial surfaces’ or ‘Natural vegetation’, both within and outside PAs. Broad scale EU policies (like the Common Agricultural Policy) and socio-economic drivers (like the transition from planned to market economy) seem to be dominant factors in explaining land-cover transformations, while conservation policies may moderate these trends inside PAs.