9 research outputs found

    La connaissance en action : le Centre de l’Innovation pour le Développement de Wageningen

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    Knowledge in action : Accelerated by Wageningen Centre for Development Innovation

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    Self-assessment Report : Wageningen Centre for Development Innovation 2019

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    Self-assessment Report : Wageningen Centre for Development Innovation 2019

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    Lions do not change rivers: complex African savannas preclude top-down forcing by large carnivores

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    Trophic cascade theories such as the ‘behaviourally-mediated trophic cascade hypothesis’ (BMTCH), have mainstreamed as ecological tools for conserving biodiversity and restoring ecosystems. The BMTCH relies on indirect negative effects of large carnivores through suppression of mesocarnivore activity and habitat use. Importantly, effects of top carnivores on mesocarnivores varies over time and space, is dependent on the species involved, and local context. In South Africa, there are very few free-ranging carnivores, as populations are often restricted to enclosed reserves. While predator-proof fences reduce human-wildlife conflict, they also influence space use within communities. We used an enclosed reserve with a relatively full complement of carnivores to test the generality of the BMTCH in the African context. Using single-species, multi-season occupancy models we investigated the spatial dynamics of multiple carnivores. We also investigated spatial partitioning by vegetation type and temporal partitioning

    Bryophyte checklist of Northern Africa

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