Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 101
pro vyhledávání: '"Jeffrey E Lovich"'
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 11, p e0259978 (2021)
Turtle body size is associated with demographic and other traits like mating success, reproductive output, maturity, and survival. As such, growth analyses are valuable for testing life history theory, demographic modeling, and conservation planning.
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/d09116d1a032461281b9eac858efad2a
Publikováno v:
Environmental Research Letters, Vol 15, Iss 7, p 075004 (2020)
Despite the trade-offs between renewable energy development, land use, humans, and wildlife, wind and solar development continues to transform the western US into a green energy landscape. While renewable energy reduces carbon emissions and reliance
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/a1d77f3f36404306881a0e251223e437
Autor:
Shellie R. Puffer, Laura A. Tennant, Jeffrey E. Lovich, Mickey Agha, Amanda L. Smith, David K. Delaney, Terence R. Arundel, Leo J. Fleckenstein, Jessica Briggs, Andrew D. Walde, Joshua R. Ennen
Publikováno v:
Wildlife Research. 49:283-294
Context Camera trapping is increasingly used to collect information on wildlife occurrence and behaviour remotely. Not only does the technique provide insights into habitat use by species of interest, it also gathers information on non-target species
Autor:
Kristy L. Cummings, Jeffrey E. Lovich, Shellie R. Puffer, Sarah Greely, Christopher D. Otahal, James Gannon
Publikováno v:
Western North American Naturalist. 82
Autor:
Jeffrey E. Lovich
Publikováno v:
The Quarterly Review of Biology. 98:37-38
Autor:
Shellie R. Puffer, Derek A. Friend, Lauren T. Phillips, Elizabeth A. Hunter, Corey I. Mitchell, Mickey Agha, Philip A. Medica, Kevin T. Shoemaker, Kristy L. Cummings, Kenneth E. Nussear, Jeffrey E. Lovich, Todd C. Esque
Publikováno v:
Endangered Species Research, Vol 44, Pp 217-230 (2021)
The ‘bet hedging’ life history strategy of long-lived iteroparous species reduces short-term reproductive output to minimize the risk of reproductive failure over a lifetime. For desert-dwelling ectotherms living in variable and unpredictable env
Publikováno v:
Discover Sustainability. 3
Exotic species are often vilified as “bad” without consideration of the potential they have for contributing to ecological functions in degraded ecosystems. The red-eared slider turtle (RES) has been disparaged as one of the worst invasive specie
Autor:
Terence R. Arundel, Shellie R. Puffer, Kristy L. Cummings, Kathleen D. Brundige, Jeffrey E. Lovich
Publikováno v:
Herpetological Journal. :177-188
Little has been published regarding the burrowing habits of Agassiz’s desert tortoises (Gopherus agassizii) in the Sonoran Desert of California. We monitored the interactions of tortoises with their burrows, and other tortoises, via radio-telemetry
Autor:
Tomas Diagne, Peter V. Lindeman, James U. Van Dyke, Shiping Gong, Brian D. Horne, Jeffrey E. Lovich, Richard C. Vogt, H. Bradley Shaffer, Kalyar Platt, Russell A. Mittermeier, Anders G. J. Rhodin, Andrew D. Walde, Carla C. Eisemberg, Uwe Fritz, Kristin H. Berry, Haitao T. Shi, Peter Paul van Dijk, Ha Hoang, Karen A. Bjorndal, Natalia Gallego-García, Jeffrey A. Seminoff, Craig B. Stanford, Willem M. Roosenburg, Kurt A. Buhlmann, James O. Juvik, Steven G. Platt, Luca Luiselli, Matt Frankel, Eric V. Goode, Taylor Edwards, Rick Hudson, Timothy E.M. McCormack, John B. Iverson, Arthur Georges, Gerald Kuchling, Josh R. Ennen, Vivian P. Páez, German Forero-Medina, Hugh R. Quinn, Margaretha D. Hofmeyr, J. Whitfield Gibbons, Russell L. Burke, Ross A. Kiester, Ricky Spencer, Minh Duc Le, Patricia Koval, Justin D. Congdon, George A. Meyer, Peter C. H. Pritchard, Torsten E.G. Blanck, Alberto Bertolero
Publikováno v:
Current Biology. 30:R721-R735
Turtles and tortoises (chelonians) have been integral components of global ecosystems for about 220 million years and have played important roles in human culture for at least 400,000 years. The chelonian shell is a remarkable evolutionary adaptation