Ivan Fufachev

Ivan Fufachev
Russian Academy of Sciences | RAS · Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology

Doctor of Philosophy
Researcher, biologist

About

28
Publications
9,362
Reads
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152
Citations
Education
September 2014 - June 2018
Perm State University
Field of study
  • Biology
September 2012 - June 2014
Perm State University
Field of study
  • Biology
September 2008 - July 2012
Perm State University
Field of study
  • Biology

Publications

Publications (28)
Article
Full-text available
Indirect effects of climate change are often mediated by trophic interactions and consequences for individual species depend on how they are tied into the local food web. Here we show how the response of demographic rates of an arctic bird of prey to fluctuations in small rodent abundance changed when small rodent community composition and dynamics...
Article
Full-text available
Many birds nest in association with aggressive birds of other species to benefit from their protection against predators. We hypothesized that the protective effect also could extend to foraging resources, whereby the resultant resource-enriched habitats near a nest of aggressive raptors could be an alternative cause of associations between nesting...
Article
Full-text available
The peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus) and the gyrfalcon (Falco rusticolus) are top avian predators of Arctic ecosystems. Although existing monitoring efforts are well established for both species, collaboration of activities among Arctic scientists actively involved in research of large falcons in the Nearctic and Palearctic has been poorly coord...
Article
Full-text available
Range shifts and changes in dominance of species in communities are among the major predicted impacts of climate change on ecosystems, supported by numerous modeling studies. While climate is changing particularly rapidly in the Arctic, little observational data is available to document predicted changes in the composition of communities, in partic...
Article
Full-text available
Advances in tracking technologies have revealed the diverse migration patterns of birds, which are critical for range mapping and population estimation. Population trends are usually estimated in breeding ranges where birds remain stationary, but for species that breed in remote areas like the Arctic, these trends are often assessed in over-winteri...
Preprint
Advances in tracking technologies have revealed the diverse migration patterns of birds, which are critical for range mapping and population estimation. While population trends are typically estimated in breeding ranges where birds remain stationary, trends are commonly assessed in non-breeding ranges for species that breed in inaccessible regions...
Article
Full-text available
Camera traps are a powerful, practical, and non-invasive method used widely to monitor animal communities and evaluate management actions. However, camera trap arrays can generate thousands to millions of images that require significant time and effort to review. Computer vision has emerged as a tool to accelerate this image review process. We prop...
Article
Full-text available
Plain Language Summary This paper represents a synthesis of conceptual analyses, case study analyses, and practical thoughts on the application of convergence science in Arctic change studies. During a virtual workshop in 2020, a diverse, multi‐national team of authors consisting of social scientists, engineers, earth system scientists, and ecologi...
Preprint
Full-text available
Advancements in tracking technologies have revolutionized our understanding of bird migrations, revealing a diverse array of migratory behaviors. We propose a new pattern of migratory behavior termed ‘foxtrot migration,’ characterized by alternating quick and slow phases during the non-breeding period. This behavior involves directional and continu...
Article
Full-text available
Given the scale, speed, and complexity of recent changes in the Arctic, our understanding of their multiple implications for Arctic biota is still limited. We detail for the first time in the vast Russian Arctic the long-distance movement of an Arctic fox (Vulpes lagopus (Linnaeus, 1758)) tracked with a GPS/iridium collar providing considerably hig...
Preprint
Full-text available
To conserve bird species threatened by climate change, it is important to understand how environmental factors affected by climate change, such as snow cover, impact their ranges. While this problem is fairly well understood for breeding areas, it remains poorly understood for non-breeding areas. In non-breeding areas, seasonal cycles can strongly...
Preprint
Full-text available
Advancements in tracking technologies have revolutionized our understanding of bird migrations, revealing a diverse array of migratory behaviors. We propose a new pattern of migratory behavior termed ‘foxtrot migration,’ characterized by alternating quick and slow phases during the non-breeding period. This behavior involves directional and continu...
Preprint
Full-text available
Advancements in tracking technologies have revolutionized our understanding of bird migrations, revealing a diverse array of migratory behaviors. We propose a new pattern of migratory behavior termed 'foxtrot migration' characterized by alternating quick and slow phases during the non-breeding period. This behavior involves directional and continuo...
Preprint
Full-text available
1. Camera trap arrays can generate thousands to millions of images that require exorbitant time and effort to classify and annotate by trained observers. Computer vision has evolved as an automated alternative to manual classification. The most popular computer vision solution is the supervised Machine Learning technique, which uses labeled images...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Phylogenetic relationships of nematodes parasitizing rodents and insectivores in the northern Palaearctic were studied. 49 specimens of Syphacia, Heligmosomum, Heligmosomoides, and Longistriata were sequenced for 28S rDNA and cytb genes. Sequences for S. mesocriceti and L. depressa were obtained for the first time. The presence of H. neopolygyrus i...
Article
Full-text available
Migratory species have a limited time for habitat selection upon arrival at the breeding grounds. This is especially evident in arctic migrants, which are restricted by a narrow window of opportunity when environmental conditions are favorable for breeding. This general time constraint is amplified in rough-legged buzzards (Buteo lagopus) who, as m...
Article
Full-text available
Increased human presence in the Arctic may affect its vulnerable ecosystems. Effects on arctic and red foxes provide notable examples. Both have been documented to take anthropogenic subsidies when available, which can change diet and ranging patterns in complex ways that can either benefit or harm populations, depending on the situation. Understan...
Article
Full-text available
Space-based tracking technology using low-cost miniature tags is now delivering data on fine-scale animal movement at near-global scale. Linked with remotely sensed environmental data, this offers a biological lens on habitat integrity and connectivity for conservation and human health; a global network of animal sentinels of environmental change.
Article
Full-text available
Human-wildlife problems often arise when predators kill livestock. This can develop into serious conflicts between traditional pastoralists and other stakeholders, such as government officials and conservationists. In the Yamal Peninsula (Russia), nearly half of the indigenous Nenets people are reindeer herders. They have recently faced many challe...
Article
Full-text available
Studies of the effects of variation in resource availability are important for understanding the ecology of high-latitude mammals. This paper examines the potential of dental evidence (tooth wear and breakage) as a proxy for diet and food choice in Vulpes lagopus, the Arctic fox. It presents a preliminary study of dental microwear, gross wear score...
Article
Full-text available
This paper investigates the potential of mesoscale tooth wear (mesowear, chipping, facets, and other wear attributes) in rodents as a proxy for Arctic habitat. It presents a pilot study of narrow-headed voles, Microtus gregalis, at three sites along a latitudinal gradient of ecological subzones in the Yamal Peninsula of the Russian Arctic. These si...
Article
Full-text available
While collating contributions and comments from 36 researchers, the coordinating authors accidentally omitted Dr. Suzanne Carrière from the list of contributing co-authors. Dr. Carrière's data are described in Tables 1 and 3, Figure 2 and several places in the narrative.The new author list is thus updated in this article.
Article
Full-text available
The peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus) and the gyrfalcon (Falco rusticolus) are top avian predators of Arctic ecosystems. Although existing monitoring efforts are well established for both species, collaboration of activities among Arctic scientists actively involved in research of large falcons in the Nearctic and Palearctic has been poorly coord...
Preprint
Full-text available
Many birds nest in association with aggressive birds of other species to benefit from their protection against predators. We hypothesized that the protective effect also could extend to foraging resources, whereby the resultant resource-enriched habitats near a nest of aggressive raptors could be an alternative cause of associations between nesting...
Article
Full-text available
The appearance of Raven Corvus corax nests on technogenic landscape elements associated with the extraction and transportation of oil and gas which has been taking place in the recent years on the Yamal Peninsula, has also promoted a northward expansion of the Gyrfalcon Falco rusticolus breeding distribution. The first Gyrfalcon nest containing 4 e...
Article
Full-text available
Peregrine falcon is a top predator with an aggressive behavior during protection of the nest. Other relative timid species of birds use this feature of nesting pair of peregrine falcons and build nests at the distance of 20–100 m from the predator’s nest. This effect induced by behavior of a nesting pair of peregrine falcon is called the «umbrella»...

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