Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 13
pro vyhledávání: '"Heather B. Jackson"'
Autor:
Paul R. Armsworth, Heather B. Jackson, Seong-Hoon Cho, Melissa Clark, Joseph E. Fargione, Gwenllian D. Iacona, Taeyoung Kim, Eric R. Larson, Thomas Minney, Nathan A. Sutton
Publikováno v:
Nature Communications, Vol 8, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2017)
Prioritising areas for conservation is hindered by disagreements over ecological targets. Here, Armsworth et al. combine a simulation approach and case study to test if considering economic return on investment aids in prioritisation, and find that i
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/fa05169329094caeb6a8d8660db4ec3e
Autor:
Heather B. Jackson, James N. Sanchirico, Alexandra Thompson, Kailin Kroetz, Paul R. Armsworth
Publikováno v:
Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of AmericaLiterature Cited. 31(5)
Land protection efforts represent large societal investments and are critical to biodiversity conservation. Land protection involves a complex mosaic of areas managed by multiple organizations, using a variety of mechanisms to achieve different level
Autor:
Eric Larson, Nathan A. Sutton, Seong-Hoon Cho, Paul R. Armsworth, Heather B. Jackson, Melissa Clark, Thomas Minney, Taeyoung Kim, Joseph Fargione, Gwenllian D. Iacona
Publikováno v:
Biological Conservation. 225:229-236
Policy guidelines for creating new protected areas commonly recommend larger protected areas be favored. We examine whether these recommendations are justified, providing the first evaluation of this question to use return-on-investment (ROI) methods
Autor:
Bistra Dilkina, Rachel Fovargue, Christoph Nolte, Heather B. Jackson, Amy E. Benefield, Diane Le Bouille, Paul R. Armsworth
Publikováno v:
Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of AmericaLiterature Cited. 30(6)
Spatial optimization approaches that were originally developed to help conservation organizations determine protection decisions over small spatial scales are now used to inform global or continental scale priority setting. However, the different dec
Autor:
Heather B. Jackson, Lenore Fahrig
Publikováno v:
Global Ecology and Biogeography. 24:52-63
Aim The spatial extent (scale) at which landscape attributes are measured has a strong impact on inferred species–landscape relationships. Consequently, researchers commonly measure landscape variables at multiple scales to select one scale (the
Publikováno v:
Oecologia. 173:1237-1247
Mechanisms underlying density-area relationships (correlations between population density and patch size) have rarely been tested experimentally. It is often assumed that higher density on large patches is evidence that large patches are high quality
Publikováno v:
Landscape Ecology
Landscape Ecology, Springer Verlag, 2016, 31 (6), pp.1177-1194. ⟨10.1007/s10980-015-0314-1⟩
Landscape Ecology, Springer Verlag, 2016, 31 (6), pp.1177-1194. ⟨10.1007/s10980-015-0314-1⟩
Landscape ecologists are often interested in measuring the effects of an environmental variable on a biological response; however, the strength and direction of effect depend on the size of the area within which the environmental variable is measured
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::f7c94116ed380b03e0204f535deb1f81
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01353541
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01353541
Autor:
Lenore Fahrig, Heather B. Jackson
Publikováno v:
Landscape Ecology. 27:929-941
The spatial extent at which landscape structure best predicts population response, called the scale of effect, varies across species. An ability to predict the scale of effect of a landscape using species traits would make landscape study design more
Publikováno v:
Ecological Entomology. 37:233-243
1. Species incidence is influenced by environmental and intrinsic factors operating at multiple scales. The incidence of a dispersal-limited beetle, Odontotaenius disjunctus (Coleoptera: Passalidae), was surveyed within hierarchically nested organisa
Autor:
James T. Cronin, Bryan J. Anderson, Kyle J. Haynes, Heather B. Jackson, S. Elizabeth Jackson, Alyssa S. Hakes, Forrest P. Dillemuth
Publikováno v:
Oecologia. 151:431-441
Past studies with spatially structured herbivore populations have emphasized the primacy of intrinsic factors (e.g., patch quality), patch geometry (e.g., patch size and isolation), and more recently landscape context (e.g., matrix composition) in af