Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 66
pro vyhledávání: '"John, Seidensticker"'
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 10, Iss 5, p e0123384 (2015)
Sloth bears (Melursus ursinus) are endemic to the Indian subcontinent. As a result of continued habitat loss and degradation over the past century, sloth bear populations have been in steady decline and now exist only in isolated or fragmented habita
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/d4a2ccf382a5415d9f011daf0837b883
Autor:
Brian Gratwicke, Judy Mills, Adam Dutton, Grace Gabriel, Barney Long, John Seidensticker, Belinda Wright, Wang You, Li Zhang
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 3, Iss 7, p e2544 (2008)
A heated debate has recently emerged between tiger farmers and conservationists about the potential consequences of lifting the ban on trade in farmed tiger products in China. This debate has caused unfounded speculation about the extent of the poten
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/87367050548b4a609f9bea5d0f49c16b
Autor:
John Seidensticker
Publikováno v:
Regional Environmental Change. 16:167-179
Corridors (variably called landscape linkages, connectors, and gateways) are expanses of a landscape that facilitate the flow or movement of individuals, genes, and ecological processes. Protected areas with their buffer zones and the corridors that
Autor:
Hemendra Singh Panwar, Sandeep Sharma, Jesús E. Maldonado, John Seidensticker, Thomas C. Wood, Trishna Dutta
Publikováno v:
Ursus. 24:164-169
The sloth bear (Melursus ursinus) is a threatened species endemic to the Indian subcontinent. To date, no reliable method has been developed for identifying individuals or monitoring their populations. Here we describe a non-invasive genetic monitori
Autor:
John Seidensticker, Susan Lumpkin
What are cats? How do cats hunt? Do wild cats like catnip? Do cats dream? Cats in Question, a new book in Smithsonian's highly successful “In Question” series, offers authoritative and engaging answers to the thousands of questions about cats tha
Autor:
Sandeep Sharma, Jesús E. Maldonado, Thomas C. Wood, Hemendra Singh Panwar, Trishna Dutta, John Seidensticker
Publikováno v:
Conservation Genetics Resources. 5:863-866
The jungle cat (Felis chaus), a small-sized felid, is distributed across Southeast and South Asia to Egypt in Africa. In India, it is one of the most common small cat species but no reliable methods are available to monitor its population status. We
Autor:
Jesús E. Maldonado, John Seidensticker, Thomas C. Wood, Hemendra Singh Panwar, Trishna Dutta, Sandeep Sharma
Publikováno v:
Ecology and Evolution
We investigated the spatial genetic structure of the tiger meta-population in the Satpura–Maikal landscape of central India using population- and individual-based genetic clustering methods on multilocus genotypic data from 273 individuals. The Sat
Autor:
Hemant Panwar, Jesús E. Maldonado, Sandeep Sharma, Thomas C. Wood, John Seidensticker, Trishna Dutta
Publikováno v:
Diversity and Distributions. 19:760-771
Aim Habitat loss and fragmentation can influence the genetic structure of biological populations. Large terrestrial predators can often avoid genetic subdivision due to fragmentation because they have high rates of dispersal-mediated gene flow. Leopa
Autor:
Andrey Kushlin, Eric Wikramanayake, John Seidensticker, Susan Lumpkin, Robin Naidoo, George V. N. Powell, Dirk Joldersma, Mike Korchinsky, Keshav Varma, Thomas E. Lovejoy, Christian Del Valle, Shubash Lohani, Eric Dinerstein
Publikováno v:
Conservation Biology. 27:14-23
We propose the wildlife premium mechanism as an innovation to conserve endangered large vertebrates. The performance-based payment scheme would allow stakeholders in lower-income countries to generate revenue by recovering and maintaining threatened
Autor:
Charles McDougal, Margaret F. Kinnaird, K. Conforti, W. N. Wan Shahruddin, N. Franklin, Tim Coulson, John Seidensticker, Ronald Lewis Tilson, David W. Macdonald, D. J. L. Smith, Joshua R. Ginsberg, Kae Kawanishi, Deborah J. Martyr, Chris Carbone, Melvin E. Sunquist, L. Nath, Sarah Christie, R. Laidlaw, M. Griffiths, Timothy G. O'Brien, Antony J. Lynam, J. Holden
The monitoring and management of species depends on reliable population estimates, and this can be both difficult and very costly for cryptic large vertebrates that live in forested habitats. Recently developed camera trapping techniques have already
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::f5221fbcd1ff9466e58c2b6037eac667
https://doi.org/10.1017/s1367943001001081
https://doi.org/10.1017/s1367943001001081