Ruben Iosif
University of Bucharest
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ruben Iosif.
Ecology and Evolution | 2017
Viorel D. Popescu; Ruben Iosif; Mihai Pop; Silviu Chiriac; George Bouroș; Brett J. Furnas
Abstract Accurate population size estimates are important information for sustainable wildlife management. The Romanian Carpathians harbor the largest brown bear (Ursus arctos) population in Europe, yet current management relies on estimates of density that lack statistical oversight and ignore uncertainty deriving from track surveys. In this study, we investigate an alternative approach to estimate brown bear density using sign surveys along transects within a novel integration of occupancy models and home range methods. We performed repeated surveys along 2‐km segments of forest roads during three distinct seasons: spring 2011, fall‐winter 2011, and spring 2012, within three game management units and a Natura 2000 site. We estimated bears abundances along transects using the number of unique tracks observed per survey occasion via N‐mixture hierarchical models, which account for imperfect detection. To obtain brown bear densities, we combined these abundances with the effective sampling area of the transects, that is, estimated as a function of the median (± bootstrapped SE) of the core home range (5.58 ± 1.08 km2) based on telemetry data from 17 bears tracked for 1‐month periods overlapping our surveys windows. Our analyses yielded average brown bear densities (and 95% confidence intervals) for the three seasons of: 11.5 (7.8–15.3), 11.3 (7.4–15.2), and 12.4 (8.6–16.3) individuals/100 km2. Across game management units, mean densities ranged between 7.5 and 14.8 individuals/100 km2. Our method incorporates multiple sources of uncertainty (e.g., effective sampling area, imperfect detection) to estimate brown bear density, but the inference fundamentally relies on unmarked individuals only. While useful as a temporary approach to monitor brown bears, we urge implementing DNA capture–recapture methods regionally to inform brown bear management and recommend increasing resources for GPS collars to improve estimates of effective sampling area.
Amphibia-reptilia | 2013
Ruben Iosif; Laurenţiu Rozylowicz; Viorel D. Popescu
Road-associated mortality can lead to local declines of wildlife populations, and management agencies are actively implementing mitigation measures, especially focused on potential road mortality hotspots. In this study we used a spatially-explicit simulation modeling approach to estimate the hotspots of road mortality for the Eastern Hermanns tortoise (Testudo hermanni boettgeri) within its distribution range in Romania. Using a field experiment, we first evaluated velocities while crossing roads. Adult male tortoises moved faster than females (3.98 m/min vs. 2.51 m/min) which led to higher individual probabilities for females being killed on high-traffic roads (0.61 for females vs. 0.44 for males at traffic levels of 7000 vehicles/day). Both males and females had similar road mortality probabilities for traffic levels 35 000 vehicles/day. Our spatially explicit model suggests that, within the entire Romanian distributional range, the tortoises have an overall risk of road mortality 1.6%, which may have a negative impact on tortoise populations. Using the Getis-Ord Gi statistic, we identified road mortality hotspots with mortality rates of 5-30%, in areas bisected by high-traffic national and European-level roads. Our research is timely in that many low-traffic roads are predicted to have increased traffic associated with tourism activities, thus increasing the overall risk of mortality. We suggest that mitigation measures such as signage and roadside fences associated with underpasses have the potential to limit road mortality of this threatened species within predicted current mortality hotspots.
ZooKeys | 2018
Iulia V. Miu; B Chisamera Gabriel; Viorel D. Popescu; Ruben Iosif; Andreea Nita; Steluta Manolache; Viorel D. Gavril; Ioana Cobzaru; Laurentiu Rozylowicz
Abstract Based on species occurrence records of museum collections, published literature, and unpublished records shared by mammalian experts, we compiled a distribution database for 59 terrestrial mammals populating the extensively protected Dobrogea Region of Romania. The spatial patterns of mammal distribution and diversity was evaluated and systematic conservation planning applied to identify priority areas for their conservation. The spatial analyses revealed that intensive sampling was not directly correlated to mammal diversity but rather to accessibility for inventory. The spatial prioritisation analysis indicated a relatively aggregated pattern of areas with a high or low conservation value with virtually no connecting corridors between them. The significant overlap between Natura 2000 sites and national protected areas induced an over-optimistic vision of the effectiveness and representativeness of existing Natura 2000 network for species found in Annexes II and IV of the Habitats Directive. These results represent a key step in identifying core areas for the protection of mammal diversity and dispersal corridors for improved connectivity, and to guide future conservation efforts in increasing the effectiveness of the existing protected areas in the context of environmental changes.
Procedia environmental sciences | 2012
Ruben Iosif
Animal Conservation | 2018
Mihai Pop; Ruben Iosif; Iulia V. Miu; Laurenţiu Rozylowicz; Viorel D. Popescu
ZooKeys | 2018
Iulia V. Miu; B Chisamera Gabriel; Viorel D. Popescu; Ruben Iosif; Andreea Nita; Steluta Manolache; Viorel D. Gavril; Ioana Cobzaru; Laurentiu Rozylowicz
ZooKeys | 2018
Iulia V. Miu; B Chisamera Gabriel; Viorel D. Popescu; Ruben Iosif; Andreea Nita; Steluta Manolache; Viorel D. Gavril; Ioana Cobzaru; Laurentiu Rozylowicz
ZooKeys | 2018
Iulia V. Miu; B Chisamera Gabriel; Viorel D. Popescu; Ruben Iosif; Andreea Nita; Steluta Manolache; Viorel D. Gavril; Ioana Cobzaru; Laurentiu Rozylowicz
ZooKeys | 2018
Iulia V. Miu; B Chisamera Gabriel; Viorel D. Popescu; Ruben Iosif; Andreea Nita; Steluta Manolache; Viorel D. Gavril; Ioana Cobzaru; Laurentiu Rozylowicz
ZooKeys | 2018
Iulia V. Miu; B Chisamera Gabriel; Viorel D. Popescu; Ruben Iosif; Andreea Nita; Steluta Manolache; Viorel D. Gavril; Ioana Cobzaru; Laurentiu Rozylowicz