All Stories

  1. Turkestan Ground-jay breeding productivity
  2. Stepping stones and corridors are not equivalent in ecological networks
  3. Translocation to different regions may alter migration patterns
  4. Foxes, not crows, were the main predator of Eurasian Curlew nests in lowland dry grass-heath
  5. Roe deer condition and fertility vary with landscape context
  6. Satellite transmitters did not hinder Houbara breeding productivity
  7. Agroforestry does not reduce rubber yield and may give some biodiversity benefit
  8. Little Bustard display activity may reduce with global warming
  9. Management for Stone Curlew benefitsscarce and threatened invertebrates
  10. Experimental evidence that ground‐disturbance benefits Woodlark Lullula arborea
  11. Captive breeding cannot save the threatened Asian Houbara without regulation of hunting
  12. Estimating national population sizes: Methodological challenges and applications illustrated in the common nightingale, a declining songbird in the UK
  13. Effects of deer on woodland structure revealed through terrestrial laser scanning
  14. Successful migration of released captive-bred Asian Houbara
  15. Human activities and biodiversity opportunities in pre-industrial cultural landscapes: relevance to conservation
  16. Houbara nest success is not affected by sheep density in the Kyzlkum desert of Uzbekistan
  17. Survival rates of released captive-bred Asian Houbara in Uzbekistan
  18. Pastoralists do not affect Asian Houbara landscape-scale distribution in the Kyzlkum, Uzbekistan
  19. Deer abundance estimation at landscape-scales in heterogeneous forests
  20. Modelling biodiversity distribution in agricultural landscapes to support ecological network planning
  21. Captive Breeding is unlikely to save the endangered Great Indian Bustard
  22. Increasing Demand for Natural Rubber Necessitates a Robust Sustainability Initiative to Mitigate Impacts on Tropical Biodiversity
  23. Home-range size and habitat use of European NightjarsCaprimulgus europaeusnesting in a complex plantation-forest landscape
  24. Multi‐taxa trait and functional responses to physical disturbance
  25. Sheep do not modify Asian Houbara distribution in the Kyzlkum
  26. Amphibian concentrations in desiccating mud may determine the breeding season of the White-shouldered Ibis ( Pseudibis davisoni )
  27. Experimental test of a conservation intervention for a highly threatened waterbird
  28. Exclusion of deer affects responses of birds to woodland regeneration in winter and summer
  29. Physical disturbance enhances ecological networks for heathland biota: A multiple taxa experiment
  30. Rapid Loss of Cambodia's Grasslands
  31. Achieving landscape-scale deer management for biodiversity conservation: The need to consider sources and sinks
  32. Deer reduce habitat quality for a woodland songbird: Evidence from settlement patterns, demographic parameters, and body condition
  33. Habitat use by Nightingales in a scrub–woodland mosaic in central England
  34. The matrix affects trackway corridor suitability for an arenicolous specialist beetle
  35. Conservation potential for heathland carabid beetle fauna of linear trackways within a plantation forest
  36. Mammalian herbivores as potential seed dispersal vectors in ancient woodland fragments
  37. Biodiversity Audit Approach
  38. Low-impact agriculture requires urgent attention not greater caution: response to Phalan and colleagues
  39. The value of the trackway system within a lowland plantation forest for ground-active spiders
  40. Assessing range-wide conservation status change in an unmonitored widespread African bird species
  41. First census of the white-shouldered ibis Pseudibis davisoni reveals roost-site mismatch with Cambodia's protected areas
  42. Endemic Cyprus Warbler Sylvia melanothorax and colonizing Sardinian Warbler Sylvia melanocephala show different habitat associations
  43. Agriculture-a key element for conservation in the developing world
  44. Breeding and post-breeding responses of woodland birds to modification of habitat structure by deer
  45. Effects of landscape-scale broadleaved woodland configuration and extent on roost location for six bat species across the UK
  46. Improving the biodiversity benefits of hedgerows: How physical characteristics and the proximity of foraging habitat affect the use of linear features by bats
  47. Density and habitat preferences of male little bustard across contrasting agro-pastoral landscapes in Sardinia (Italy)
  48. Experimental evidence that deer browsing reduces habitat suitability for breeding Common NightingalesLuscinia megarhynchos
  49. Establishing a national monitoring programme for White-shouldered Ibis in Cambodia
  50. Importance of climatic and environmental change in the demography of a multi-brooded passerine, the woodlarkLullula arborea
  51. Generality of Models that Predict the Distribution of Species: Conservation Activity and Reduction of Model Transferability for a Threatened Bustard
  52. Distribution, status and conservation of the Bengal Florican Houbaropsis bengalensis in Cambodia
  53. Regional scale effects of human density and forest disturbance on large-bodied vertebrates throughout the Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico
  54. Sex-Specific Habitat Use by a Lekking Bustard: Conservation Implications for the Critically Endangered Bengal Florican ( Houbaropsis bengalensis ) in an Intensifying Agroecosystem
  55. Early nesting does not result in greater productivity in the multi-brooded WoodlarkLullula arborea
  56. The response of bird populations to habitat loss
  57. Ecosystem and competition impacts of introduced deer
  58. Reproductive success of WoodlarksLullula arboreain traditional and recently colonized habitats
  59. Nest-site characteristics of WoodlarksLullula arboreabreeding on heathlands in southern England: are there consequences for nest survival and productivity?
  60. Habitat preferences of a globally threatened bustard provide support for community-based conservation in Cambodia
  61. Regional scale variation in forest structure and biomass in the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico: Effects of forest disturbance
  62. Estimating abundance of introduced Chinese muntjac Muntiacus reevesi and native roe deer Capreolus capreolus using portable thermal imaging equipment
  63. Quantifying density dependence in a bird population using human disturbance
  64. Linking recreational disturbance to population size in a ground-nesting passerine
  65. Conservation of Heathland Ground Beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae): The Value of Lowland Coniferous Plantations
  66. Response to Mathevet and Mauchamp: Evidence-based conservation: dealing with social issues
  67. The disappearance of muntjac (Muntiacus reevesi) and roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) pellet groups in a pine forest of lowland England
  68. The need for evidence-based conservation
  69. Visualizing sustainable agricultural landscapes
  70. Designing Whole Landscapes
  71. Spatial Patterns of Depletion Imposed by Foraging Vertebrates: Theory, Review and Meta-Analysis
  72. The intensity of interference varies with resource density: evidence from a field study with snow buntings, Plectrophenax nivalis
  73. The use of Soil Disturbance in the Management of Breckland Grass Heaths for Nature Conservation
  74. The Ecological Changes of Breckland Grass Heaths and the Consequences of Management
  75. Designing whole landscapes
  76. Mechanisms and processes underlying landscape structure effects on bird populations