Automated Author ProfileWassmer, Thomas
0000-0002-1456-3475
Wassmer, Thomas
Current S-Index
Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets
Average Dataset Index per Dataset
Average Dataset Index per dataset
Total Datasets
Total datasets for this author
Average FAIR Score
Average FAIR Score per dataset
Total Citations
Total citations to the author's datasets
Total Mentions
Total mentions of the author's datasets
S-Index Interpretation
The S-Index (Sharing Index) is a comprehensive metric that represents the cumulative impact of all your datasets. It is calculated as the sum of Dataset Index scores across all your claimed datasets.
What it means:
- A higher S-index indicates greater overall impact of your datasets relative to typical datasets in their fields of research
- The S-Index grows as you add more datasets or as existing datasets gain more citations and mentions
- It provides a single number to track your research data impact over time
Current S-Index: 2.3 (sum of 8 datasets Dataset Index scores)
More information here.
S-Index Over Time
Cumulative Citations Over Time
Cumulative Mentions Over Time
Datasets
Until now, little is known about the population structure and mobility of temperate dung beetles including the rainbow scarab Phanaeus vindex (MacLeay 1819) although this knowledge is essential for their conservation as pastures become increasingly rare and the landscape fragmented by monocultures and urbanization. Here, we estimate population size, longevity, and dispersal within and between pastures. For three years, we life-trapped beetles every week on 2 adjacent farms in SE-Michigan, determined their sex, male morph, and size, and marked their elytra with individual tattoo patterns before releasing them. We marked a total of 470 rainbow scarabs of which 14 were recaptured once and two were recaptured twice. The sex ratio was not significantly sex-biased but fluctuated between months with no apparent uniformity between years. While the minor to major male ratios were unbiased in 2019 and 2020, they were marginally minor-biased in 2021. The gross population estimates for the two farms were 458-491 and 217 rainbow scarabs, respectively. Beetles travelled distances of up to 178 m within farms. No beetles dispersed between farms. One large female was recaptured after 338 days documenting the first cold hardiness and long lifespan of a cold-temperate dung beetle species. The low population estimates on both farms indicate two vulnerable populations with no or extremely limited connectivity. Supplementary funding for the land stewardship of small-scale cattle farmers could stabilize populations of native dung beetles and maintain their ecosystem services.
Authors
- Wassmer, Thomas ;
- Armstrong, Elise
Until now, little is known about the population structure and mobility of temperate dung beetles including the rainbow scarab Phanaeus vindex (MacLeay 1819) although this knowledge is essential for their conservation as pastures become increasingly rare and the landscape fragmented by monocultures and urbanization. Here, we estimate population size, longevity, and dispersal within and between pastures. For three years, we life-trapped beetles every week on 2 adjacent farms in SE-Michigan, determined their sex, male morph, and size, and marked their elytra with individual tattoo patterns before releasing them. We marked a total of 470 rainbow scarabs of which 14 were recaptured once and two were recaptured twice. The sex ratio was not significantly sex-biased but fluctuated between months with no apparent uniformity between years. While the minor to major male ratios were unbiased in 2019 and 2020, they were marginally minor-biased in 2021. The gross population estimates for the two farms were 458-491 and 217 rainbow scarabs, respectively. Beetles travelled distances of up to 178 m within farms. No beetles dispersed between farms. One large female was recaptured after 338 days documenting the first cold hardiness and long lifespan of a cold-temperate dung beetle species. The low population estimates on both farms indicate two vulnerable populations with no or extremely limited connectivity. Supplementary funding for the land stewardship of small-scale cattle farmers could stabilize populations of native dung beetles and maintain their ecosystem services.
Authors
- Wassmer, Thomas ;
- Armstrong, Elise
Until now, little is known about the population structure and mobility of temperate dung beetles including the rainbow scarab Phanaeus vindex (MacLeay 1819) although this knowledge is essential for their conservation as pastures become increasingly rare and the landscape fragmented by monocultures and urbanization. Here, we estimate population size, longevity, and dispersal within and between pastures. For three years, we life-trapped beetles every week on 2 adjacent farms in SE-Michigan, determined their sex, male morph, and size, and marked their elytra with individual tattoo patterns before releasing them. We marked a total of 470 rainbow scarabs of which 14 were recaptured once and two were recaptured twice. The sex ratio was not significantly sex-biased but fluctuated between months with no apparent uniformity between years. While the minor to major male ratios were unbiased in 2019 and 2020, they were marginally minor-biased in 2021. The gross population estimates for the two farms were 458-491 and 217 rainbow scarabs, respectively. Beetles travelled distances of up to 178 m within farms. No beetles dispersed between farms. One large female was recaptured after 338 days documenting the first cold hardiness and long lifespan of a cold-temperate dung beetle species. The low population estimates on both farms indicate two vulnerable populations with no or extremely limited connectivity. Supplementary funding for the land stewardship of small-scale cattle farmers could stabilize populations of native dung beetles and maintain their ecosystem services.
Authors
- Wassmer, Thomas ;
- Armstrong, Elise
Waßmer, T. (2002) INFLUENCE OF HOUSING CONDITIONS ON THE HIBERNATION PATTERNS OFEUROPEAN HAMSTERS (CRICETUS CRICETUS). Submitted to and rejected by the Journal of Mammalogy. Full paper including the reviews which lead to rejection of the ms.
Authors
- Wassmer, Thomas
Test
Authors
- Wassmer, Thomas
Waßmer, T. (2002) INFLUENCE OF HOUSING CONDITIONS ON THE HIBERNATION PATTERNS OFEUROPEAN HAMSTERS (CRICETUS CRICETUS). Submitted to and rejected by the Journal of Mammalogy. Full paper including the reviews which lead to rejection of the ms.
Authors
- Wassmer, Thomas
Test
Authors
- Wassmer, Thomas
Waßmer, T. (2002) INFLUENCE OF HOUSING CONDITIONS ON THE HIBERNATION PATTERNS OFEUROPEAN HAMSTERS (CRICETUS CRICETUS). Submitted to and rejected by the Journal of Mammalogy. Full paper including the reviews which lead to rejection of the ms.
Authors
- Wassmer, Thomas