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Archive for the ‘conservation science’ Category

Special Issue of Conservation Biology

From Wiley-Blackwell website:

Conservation Biology

Edited by Erica Fleishman

The December 2011 issue celebrates the journal’s 25th anniversary with two special sections and two additional articles, all free for a limited time. The first special section, edited by Kent Redford, includes nine essays by people outside the traditional community of conservation professionals who examine ways of making conservation efforts more successful in the next 25 years. The second special section, edited by Eric Dinerstein, includes eight essays on diverse topics likely to be emphasized by conservation professionals in the years ahead, and ideas that may change how conservation professionals work.

A diversity article by Josh Drew assesses how the historical strengths of natural history institutions can enhance research and engage the public in novel ways, while a Contributed Paper by Murray Rudd explores the extent to which there is consensus among conservation professionals on losses of biological diversity and potential strategies for its conservation.

  The Futures of Conservation
Click below to read the articles in the issue’s first special section.

Introduction
Kent H. Redford and Erica Fleishman

Conservation Biology through the Lens of a Career in Salmon Conservation
Charles Conn

Conservation Means Behavior
P. Wesley Schultz

Indigenous Alliances for Conservation in Bolivia
R. L. E. Painter, A. Duran and E. Miro

Finding Balance between Human Need and Global Stewardship
Jon Waterhouse

A Vision of Conservation from School
José Antonio López Tercero Caamaño

Walking the Path of Environmental Buddhism through Compassion and Emptiness
H.H. 17th Gyalwang Karmapa Ogyen Trinley Dorje

Competing Cultures of Conservation
Rebecca Hardin

Cultivating a Constituency for Conservation
Lowell Pritchard

Reaching the U.S. Public through Their Patriotism, Pastors, and Pockets
Paul O’Brien

Conservation Science in the Coming Decades
Click below to read the articles in the issue’s second special section.

Introduction
Eric Dinerstein

Systemic Conservation, REDD, and the Future of the Amazon Basin
Daniel C. Nepstad, David G. Mcgrath and Britaldo Soares-Filho

Land, Food, and Biodiversity
David W. McLaughlin

Biodiversity Offsets and Infrastructure
Juan David Quintero and Aradhna Mathur

Conservation in Sustainable-Use Tropical Forest Reserves
Carlos A. Peres

Marine Protected Areas and the Governance of Marine Ecosystems and Fisheries
Bonnie J. McCay and Peter J. S. Jones

The Future of Payments for Environmental Services
Paul J. Ferraro

Climate Change, Connectivity, and Conservation Success
Lee Hannah

Future Human Intervention in Ecosystems and the Critical Role for Evolutionary Biology
J. J. Hellmann and M. E. Pfrender

  Additional Articles
The Role of Natural History Institutions and Bioinformatics in Conservation Biology
Joshua Drew

Scientists’ Opinions on the Global Status and Management of Biological Diversity
Murray A. Rudd

Becas de investigación ACCA

La Asociación para la Conservación de la Cuenca Amazónica (ACCA) en convenio con Amazon Conservation Asociation (ACA) y con el financiamiento de la Fundación Klorfine, convocan al concurso para “Becas de investigación para estudiantes universitarios y tesistas”. Se otorgaran dos becas de investigacion este 2011, el plazo limite para presentar las propuestas es el 20 de Agosto, se daran los resultados el 30 de Agosto. La investigacion se debera llevar a cabo como maximo hasta el dia 15 de Diciembre del 2011.

Más información: Gabriela Nunez gnunez@conservacamazonica.org

Learning R via webinar

Learn R, a free software environment for statistical computing and graphics

The webinar course is designed for natural resource managers and is open to all who are interested without charge. R (the open-source/free version of S) provides a comprehensive environment for statistical analysis and graphics that is unrivaled in the availability of new, cutting-edge applications. It runs under most operating systems. Audio of the presentations is available either using your computer speakers and optional microphone or headset or by calling a phone bridge long distance. Live video of the presenter’s computer screen is available over the web. You can also share your computer’s screen with other participants when asking a question or making a point. An audio and video recording of the presentations and discussion will be available on our FTP site after the presentations.  There are no specific prerequisites but some knowledge of statistics would be helpful. A basic knowledge of computers and the internet will be assumed.
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Amazon Science News

A small  sample  of  scientific communications that have to deal with the Amazon

Brosse, S., G. Grenouillet, et al. (2011). “Small-scale gold mining erodes fish assemblage structure in small neotropical streams.” Biodiversity and Conservation: 1013-1026.
The current gold rush experienced by the Guiana shield is profoundly disturbing freshwater ecosystems. Indeed, streams act as receptors for the water that drains gold mining sites and that contain a high load of sediment and toxicants. We here investigated how gold mining activities affect the structure of fish assemblages in small forest streams in French Guiana. We selected six streams subjected to different types of gold mining impact (reference, former gold mining and currently exploited sites) to measure the impact of gold mining on downstream fish assemblages, but also to determine the resilience of fish assemblages after stopping mining activities. Although overall descriptors of the assemblage such as species richness and fish biomass were not sensitive to gold mining, the fish taxonomic composition was strongly influenced. Furthermore, we showed that the functional structure of fish assemblages was significantly affected by the mining activities favouring smaller and ubiquitous fish at the expense of bigger and habitat specialist species. Even in areas where mining activities had stopped for some time, site resilience was incomplete. http://dl.dropbox.com/u/606110/Brosse%20et%20al.%20-%202011.pdf

Loarie, S. R., D. B. Lobell, et al. (2011). “Direct impacts on local climate of sugar-cane expansion in Brazil.” Nature Climate Change 1: 1-5.
The increasing global demand for biofuels will require conversion of conventional agricultural or natural ecosystems. Expanding biofuel production into areas now used for agriculture reduces the need to clear natural ecosystems, leading to indirect climate benefits through reduced greenhouse-gas emissions and faster payback of carbon debts1. Biofuel expansion may also cause direct, local climate changes by altering surface albedo and evapotranspiration2, but these effects have been poorly documented. Here we quantify the direct climate effects of sugar-cane expansion in the Brazilian Cerrado, on the basis of maps of recent sugar-cane expansion and natural-vegetation clearance combined with remotely sensed temperature, albedo and evapotranspiration over a 1.9 million km2 area. On a regional basis for clear-sky daytime conditions, conversion of natural vegetation to a crop/pasture mosaic warms the cerrado by an average of 1.55 (1.45–1.65) °C, but subsequent conversion of that mosaic to sugar cane cools the region by an average of 0.93 (0.78–1.07) °C, resulting in a mean net increase of 0.6    . Our results indicate that expanding sugar caneinto existing crop and pasture land has a direct local cooling effect that reinforces the indirect climate benefits of this land-use option. http://dl.dropbox.com/u/606110/Loarie%20et%20al.%20-%202011.pdf

Nogueira, S. S. C. and S. L. G. Nogueira-Filho (2011). “Wildlife farming: an alternative to unsustainable hunting and deforestation in Neotropical forests?” Biodiversity and Conservation.
Wild animals have been a source of food and income through subsistence hunting by forest-dwelling people in Neotropical countries in spite of the fact that hunting appears to be unsustainable as it leads to the depletion of wild fauna. Laws in Brazil and other Latin American countries forbid hunting but allow the commercial use of captive-bred animals. Notwithstanding the fact that this is a controversial topic among conservationists, in this paper we propose that wildlife farming in the Neotropics can be an alternative to the over-hunting and deforestation that are carried out for the production of traditional food and pastures for livestock. This review sets out this proposal, and discusses the implications for tropical forest integrity and rural population dependency on forest resources. We discuss the ecological and economical advantages of wildlife farming and its constraints as a conservation tool, using collared peccary (Pecari tajacu) farming in the Amazon region as a model. Productivity levels may reach 19,000 times higher than those obtained from the management of peccaries from forests in the Amazon region. This can be achieved with an easily obtainable diet composed of forest fruits and locally available agricultural by-products. Therefore, establishing captive management programs for peccaries is an effective way of avoiding wild stock depletion, deforestation, and guaranteeing the livelihood of forest dwellers in the Neotropics. However, it is essential that governmental and/or non-governmental agencies be involved in providing subsides to establish peccary farms, provide technical assistance, and introducing peccary captive breeding centers to supply founder stock. http://dl.dropbox.com/u/606110/Nogueira%2C%20Nogueira-Filho%20-%202011.pdf

Pitman, N. C. a., D. Norris, et al. (2011). “Four years of vertebrate monitoring on an upper Amazonian river.” Biodiversity and Conservation: 827-849.
Long-term monitoring of tropical forest animals lags far behind long-term monitoring of tropical forest plants, compromising ecologists’ ability to identify parallel trends. On 257 occasions over 4 years, park guards in a newly protected lowland Amazonian forest in southeastern Peru tallied individuals of 31 reptile, bird, and mammal species sighted along a 47-km stretch of river. Each survey entailed ~3 h of observation from a motorized boat; total survey effort was 892 h and ~12,048 km. Our primary goals were descriptive: to establish baseline sighting rates for these species and to document trends over time and the influence of environmental and sampling factors on sightings. Our secondary goals were to identify the advantages and disadvantages of river-based monitoring and to assess how useful these data are for ecologists and protected areas managers. Over the 4 years of monitoring we observed 1.8 animals/km. More than 90% of recorded individuals belonged to seven common taxa: two reptiles, four birds, and one mammal. Season was the most frequent correlate of sighting frequency; sightings increased in dry season. For the majority of taxa common enough to analyze, sightings increased over the 4 years of monitoring; this is possibly a result of reduced hunting since the establishment of the protected area. Compared to forest-based surveys, river-based surveys were inefficient at recording most mammals. Results to date suggest that river-based surveys can be a valuable, inexpensive tool for monitoring some ecologically important Amazonian animals, and especially those in protected areas. http://dl.dropbox.com/u/606110/Pitman%20et%20al.%20-%202011.pdf

Pitman, N. C. A., G. Stocks, et al. (2011). “Volume and Geographical Distribution of Ecological Research in the Andes and the Amazon , 1995-2008.” Tropical Conservation Science 4(1): 64-81.
The Andes range and the Amazon basin represent the most diverse biological community on earth and the largest  tropical  forest  on earth,  respectively,  but  they  are  historically  understudied  by  biologists.    In this paper we provide the first quantitative description of the volume and geographical distribution of ecological research in these regions.  We compiled a dataset of all articles based on the Andes and Amazon regions published  in  two  prominent  international  tropical  ecology  journals  between  1995  and  2008.    During this period, the number of scientific articles based on research in the Amazon was half that based on research in Central  America, while  the Andes  scored  among  the  least-studied  of  all  tropical  regions.    Brazil  was  the leading base for Amazonian studies and Ecuador the primary location for Andean studies, but Ecuador led both  categories  and  Brazil  came  last  when  research  effort  was standardized  by  area.   Most Amazonian research took place in three regions—Manaus, southeastern Peru, and eastern Ecuador—with ~31 percent of all papers coming from four field stations in those regions.  Andean research focused overwhelmingly on the northern Andes.  Research in the Andes range and the Amazon basin remains scattered, patchy, and far below  its  potential.  We  propose steps  that  funding  agencies  can  take  to  increase  research  output  and reduce geographical bias in the study of South America’s richest ecosystems. http://dl.dropbox.com/u/606110/Pitman%20et%20al.%20-%202011%20copy.pdf

Swenson, J. J., C. E. Carter, et al. (2011). “Gold Mining in the Peruvian Amazon: Global Prices, Deforestation, and Mercury Imports.” PLoS ONE 6: e18875.
Many factors such as poverty, ineffective institutions and environmental regulations may prevent developing countries from managing how natural resources are extracted to meet a strong market demand. Extraction for some resources has reached such proportions that evidence is measurable from space. We present recent evidence of the global demand for a single commodity and the ecosystem destruction resulting from commodity extraction, recorded by satellites for one of the most biodiverse areas of the world. We find that since 2003, recent mining deforestation in Madre de Dios, Peru is increasing nonlinearly alongside a constant annual rate of increase in international gold price (~18%/yr). We detect that the new pattern of mining deforestation (1915 ha/year, 2006–2009) is outpacing that of nearby settlement deforestation. We show that gold price is linked with exponential increases in Peruvian national mercury imports over time (R2 = 0.93, p = 0.04, 2003–2009). Given the past rates of increase we predict that mercury imports may more than double for 2011 (~500 t/year). Virtually all of Peru’s mercury imports are used in artisanal gold mining. Much of the mining increase is unregulated/artisanal in nature, lacking environmental impact analysis or miner education. As a result, large quantities of mercury are being released into the atmosphere, sediments and waterways. Other developing countries endowed with gold deposits are likely experiencing similar environmental destruction in response to recent record high gold prices. The increasing availability of satellite imagery ought to evoke further studies linking economic variables with land use and cover changes on the ground. http://dl.dropbox.com/u/606110/Swenson%20et%20al.%20-%202011.pdf

Xu, L., A. Samanta, et al. (2011). “Widespread decline in greenness of Amazonian vegetation due to the 2010 drought.” Geophysical Research Letters 38: 2-5.
During this decade, the Amazon region has suffered two severe droughts in the short span of five years – 2005 and 2010. Studies on the 2005 drought present a complex, and sometimes contradictory, picture of how these forests have responded to the drought. Now, on the heels of the 2005 drought, comes an even stronger drought in 2010, as indicated by record low river levels in the 109 years of bookkeeping. How has the vegetation in this region responded to this record-breaking drought? Here we report widespread, severe and persistent declines in vegetation greenness, a proxy for photosynthetic carbon fixation, in the Amazon region during the 2010 drought based on analysis of satellite measurements. The 2010 drought, as measured by rainfall deficit, affected an area 1.65 times larger than the 2005 drought – nearly 5 million km2 of vegetated area in Amazonia. The decline in greenness during the 2010 drought spanned an area that was four times greater (2.4 million km2) and more severe than in 2005. Notably, 51% of all drought-stricken forests showed greenness declines in 2010 (1.68 million km2) compared to only 14% in 2005 (0.32 million km2). These declines in 2010 persisted following the end of the dry season drought and return of rainfall to normal levels, unlike in 2005. Overall, the widespread loss of photosynthetic capacity of Amazonian vegetation due to the 2010 drought may represent a significant perturbation to the global carbon cycle. http://dl.dropbox.com/u/606110/Xu%20et%20al.%20-%202011.pdf

 

Earth Pages

Earth Pages is a blog about  Earth Sciences and News from the Geological World. A quite interesting site if you are interested in recent developments about climate change, anthropology and extraterrestrial geology (sic).  http://http://earth-pages.co.uk/

Free conservation biology textbook

Oxford University Press makes conservation biology textbook by some of the world’s most prominent ecologists and conservation biologists available as free download (from Mongabay.com).  Print version http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0199554242/mongabay-20

Conservation Biology for All provides cutting-edge but basic conservation science to a global readership. A series of authoritative chapters have been written by the top names in conservation biology with the principal aim of disseminating cutting-edge conservation knowledge as widely as possible. Important topics such as balancing conversion and human needs, climate change, conservation planning, designing and analyzing conservation research, ecosystem services, endangered species management, extinctions, fire, habitat loss, and invasive species are covered. Numerous text boxes describing additional relevant material or case studies are also included.  PDF version: http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/conservation-biology-for-all/Conservation-Biology-for-All.pdf

Tropical Conservation Science

Tropical Conservation Science is a peer-reviewed open access journal that publishes original research papers and state-of-the-art reviews of broad interest to the field of conservation of tropical forests and of other tropical ecosystems. Tropical Conservation Science publishes papers in English, Spanish, Portuguese, French, and Chinese.

http://tropicalconservationscience.mongabay.com/most_popular.html#2010

Uso del espacio en los tiempos del Web 2.0

El primer post del 2011 está dedicado a Lian Pin Koh. http://www.lianpinkoh.com/.  Aparte del contenido que resulta más que interesante para los que aspiramos a entender mejor la relación espacial entre conservación y otros usos de la tierra, LPK nos ofrece lo mejor de su repertorio académico.  Un ejemplo de lo que debiera ser la página personal de un científico 2.0.  I surrounder to your greatness Lian. :-D

Masters of Environmental Science, Policy & Management

MESPOM is an Erasmus Mundus Masters course in Environmental Sciences, Policy and Management operated by four leading European and two North American Universities and supported by the European Commission. MESPOM prepares students for identifying and implementing solutions to complex environmental challenges, especially in an international context.

The MESPOM study programme is in English and lasts two years. Thestudents study in at least three out of six consortium universities: the International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics at Lund University (Sweden), the University of Manchester (UK), Central European University (Budapest), the University of the Aegean (Lesvos, Greece), Middlebury College and its affiliate Monterey Institute for International Studies (MIIS) (USA), and the University of Saskatchewan (UoS) (Canada).

The European Commission’s Erasmus Mundus programme provides scholarships to outstanding students and to scholars to participate in teaching and research.

For more information, please see http://mespom.eu/ orhttp://www.envsci.ceu.hu/

From [Conservation-Science]

Ecology and Conservation of Neotropical Rivers Course

This two-week course is oriented towards graduate students and early career conservation scientists from both U.S. and Latin American institutions with interest in applied research on current conservation issues for Neotropical rivers. The course will be held at La Selva Biological Station, with field trips to the surrounding Sarapiquí River basin. This region offers opportunity to observe diverse river types and aquatic biota along elevational and longitudinal riverine gradients. Additionally, as in many parts of the tropics, rivers in the Sarapiquí basin are increasingly being altered as a consequence of human activities.

WHEN AND WHERE
La Selva Biological Station, Costa Rica.
Course dates: May 8 – 22, 2011.
Arrive May 7, depart May 23, 2011

APPLICATION DEADLINE
February 1, 2011 for priority admission, followed by rolling admission until fully enrolled.

Find more information of this and other courses at OTS Graduate Studies page.

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