<p dir="ltr">Both conventional and unconventional drilling have detrimental environmental impacts, yet the Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis (IDH) suggests moderate disturbances can be beneficial for the ecosystem. To examine whether mild drilling activity can elevate biodiversity, this study utilized butterflies as bioindicators and data collected from community scientists of the North American Butterfly Society to investigate the impacts of drilling activity among five locations. Linear regressions indicated biotic simplification at drilled sites. A quartiles-based ANOVA generalized trends of species richness- particularly handy for broad policy formation. A ranges-based analysis highlighted variability in drilling activity- useful for stricter management of drilling activity. Count circles in East Bedford or near “Low” drilling activity had the most individual butterflies, irrespective of Drilling Activity categorization. In summary, the results from this study underscore the strength of utilizing community science data for ecological studies, and the importance of site-specific and proactive conservation.</p>
History
Publisher
ProQuest
Language
English
Committee chair
Christopher Tudge
Committee member(s)
Cathy Schaeff; Rebecca Hazen
Degree discipline
Biology
Degree grantor
American University. College of Arts and Sciences
Degree level
Masters
Degree name
M.S. in Biology, American University, August 2024
Local identifier
Hafeez_american_0008N_12255
Media type
application/pdf
Pagination
79 pages
Access statement
Electronic thesis is restricted to authorized American University users only, per author's request.