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Featured researches published by Mike James.


Parasitology | 2004

Variation in the helminth community structure in spiny mice (Acomys dimidiatus) from four montane wadis in the St Katherine region of the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt

Jerzy M. Behnke; P. D. Harris; Anna Bajer; C. J. Barnard; Nour E. Sherif; Laura Cliffe; Jane L. Hurst; M. Lamb; Alex Rhodes; Mike James; Simon Clifford; Francis Gilbert; Samy Zalat

We compared helminth communities in spiny mice (Acomys dimidiatus) from 4 wadis in the arid montane region of the southern Sinai in Egypt, in a 4-week period in late summer. Total helminth species richness was 14 (8 nematodes, 5 cestodes and 1 acanthocephalan) with 94% of mice carrying at least 1 species and an overall mean species richness of 1.85. The most prevalent parasites were Protospirura muricola (47.8 %) and Dentostomella kuntzi (46.3%). One larval cestode, Joyeuxiella rossicum, represents a new host record. The helminth community was dominated by intestinal nematodes (88.7%) of which 58.2% were arthropod-transmitted heteroxenic species. At the component community level, 70% of the worms were recovered from mice in just two wadis (Gharaba and Tlah) and 48.6 % of intestinal nematodes were from Wadi Gharaba. Although only 7 species of helminths were recorded from Wadi Gharaba, this site gave the highest Berger-Parker dominance index because of P. muricola. P. muricola was also dominant in Wadi El Arbaein whilst Syphacia minuta was the dominant species in Wadis Gebal and Tlah. At the infracommunity level, mean species richness and Brillouins index of diversity were highest in Wadi Tlah and lowest in Wadi Gebal, and the former was age dependent. Whilst mice from different wadis differed in the nematodes that were most common, those from Wadi Gharaba carried the highest mean number of worms/mouse. The abundance of P. muricola in particular varied markedly between sites: Wadi Gharaba was distinct as the site showing the highest mean worm burden whereas mice from Wadi Gebal were uninfected. None of the directly transmitted oxyuroid nematodes showed significant variation in abundance between wadis, or host sex or age classes. Overall, the single extrinsic factor in the study, site of capture, was more important than the intrinsic factors in explaining variation in helminth communities in the region. We conclude that in the high mountains of southern Sinai, each wadi is distinct in terms of its rodent parasites, and hence we expect spatially different coevolutionary pressures on their hosts, with resultant variation in life-histories.


Oecologia | 2003

Thyme and isolation for the Sinai baton blue butterfly (Pseudophilotes sinaicus)

Mike James; Francis Gilbert; Samy Zalat

The distribution of the narrowly endemic butterfly Pseudophilotes sinaicus (Lycaenidae) was studied. Potential habitat within its range was first located and then the quality of that habitat assessed. Degree of shelter, diversity of plant species, and resource area of an individual food plant (Thymus decussatus) all affected habitat quality and together were used to develop an index of habitat suitability applicable to each site. The butterflys distribution was then studied within the identified network of suitable habitat patches: isolated patches with a small resource area were least likely to contain butterflies. Population size in a patch (as opposed merely to patch occupancy) was affected by resource area and the quality of habitat within that patch. Metapopulation processes and variation in habitat quality therefore appear to combine to describe the distribution of patches occupied by P. sinaicus and their population sizes. This finding provides insights into some of the processes operating on an endemic species throughout its geographical range and has important implications for the conservation of this rare butterfly.


Conservation Biology | 2005

Global Warming, Human Population Pressure, and Viability of the World's Smallest Butterfly

Martin Hoyle; Mike James


Egyptian Journal of Biology | 2006

Intra-patch movement in the Sinai Baton Blue butterfly: influence of micro-habitat and individual characteristics

Mike James


Egyptian Journal of Biology | 2006

Metapopulations and the Sinai Baton Blue ( Pseudophilotes sinaicus Nakamura): an introduction

Mike James


Egyptian Journal of Biology | 2006

The natural history of the Sinai Baton Blue: the smallest butterfly in the world

Mike James


Egyptian Journal of Biology | 2006

Interactions among species in a tri-trophic system: the influence of ants on the distribution of the Sinai Baton Blue butterfly

Mike James


Egyptian Journal of Biology | 2006

Immigration and emigration in the Sinai Baton Blue butterfly: estimates from a single patch

Mike James


Egyptian Journal of Biology | 2006

Demographic processes in a local population: seasonal dynamics of the Sinai Baton Blue butterfly

Mike James


Egyptian Journal of Biology | 2010

Monitoring of the endemic Sinai Baton Blue butterfly Pseudophilotes sinaicus in the St Katherine Protectorate, South Sinai

Francis Gilbert; S. Rashad; M. Kamel; A. E. Soultan; Mike James; Samy Zalat

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Alex Rhodes

University of Nottingham

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C. J. Barnard

University of Nottingham

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Laura Cliffe

University of Nottingham

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M. Lamb

University of Nottingham

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Simon Clifford

University of Nottingham

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