10 research outputs found
Factors associated with co-occurrence of large carnivores in a human-dominated landscape
Water and poverty: the realities : experiences from the field.
Agricultural water and poverty linkages: case studies on large and small systems / Intizar Hussein, Mark Giordano, and Munir A. HanjraAllocating water for home-based productive activities in Bushbuckbridge, South Africa / John Soussan, Sharon Pollard, Juan Carlos Perez de Mendiguren, and John ButterworthCoastal zone policies and livelihoods in Bangladesh / Anjan Datta, Dirk Frans, and John SoussanGender and economic benefits from domestic water supply in Semiarid areas: a case study in Banaskantha district, Gujarat, Western India / Jennifer FrancisIntegrated management of water, forest, and land resources in Nepal: opportunities for improved livelihood / Dhruba Pant, Sabita Thapa, Ashok Singh, and Madhusudhan BhattaraiMicroirrigation for income generation in Asia / Michael RobertsMountain-river-lake integrated water resources development program, Jiangxi, People's Republic of China / Dajun Shen and Juan WuNGO intermediation: a model for securing access to water for the urban poor / Rokeya AhmedStrengthening the demand-responsive approach: learning from program experience in Niassa province, Mozambique / Edward D. BreslinThe Soozhal initiative: a model for achieving total sanitation in low-income rural areas / S. Ramesh Sakthivel and Roger FitzgeraldWater and poverty: a case of watershed development in Andhra Pradesh, India / Ratna Reddy, Malla Reddy, and John Soussa
Tigers in the Terai: Strong evidence for meta-population dynamics contributing to tiger recovery and conservation in the Terai Arc Landscape - Fig 2
<p>Minimum Convex Polygon (MCP) from multiyear camera trap surveys carried out in a) core area of Suklaphanta National Park; b) Babai valley within Bardia National Park.</p
Fitted polynomial growth curve based on 3%, 10%, 21% growth rates regressed on minimum population size (M<sub>t+1</sub>) of camera trap tiger population surveyed in between 2009 and 2014 in core area of Suklaphanta National Park.
<p>Fitted polynomial growth curve based on 3%, 10%, 21% growth rates regressed on minimum population size (M<sub>t+1</sub>) of camera trap tiger population surveyed in between 2009 and 2014 in core area of Suklaphanta National Park.</p
A male tiger captured along the Bardia-Katerniaghat forest matrix connected through Khata corridor forest in the western part of Terai Arc Landscape.
<p>A male tiger captured along the Bardia-Katerniaghat forest matrix connected through Khata corridor forest in the western part of Terai Arc Landscape.</p
Infrastructure development (railways, highways and postal roads) along the transboundary tiger habitat between Nepal and India across Terai Arc Landscape.
<p>Infrastructure development (railways, highways and postal roads) along the transboundary tiger habitat between Nepal and India across Terai Arc Landscape.</p
Terai Arc Landscape showing network of 16 protected areas in Nepal (5) and India (11) and forest corridor identified within the Nepal side of the landscape.
<p>Terai Arc Landscape showing network of 16 protected areas in Nepal (5) and India (11) and forest corridor identified within the Nepal side of the landscape.</p
Trend in minimum population size (M<sub>t+1</sub>) of the tiger population based on adhoc camera trap tiger population surveyed in between 2006 and 2016 in the core area of Babai Valley within Bardia National Park.
<p>Trend in minimum population size (M<sub>t+1</sub>) of the tiger population based on adhoc camera trap tiger population surveyed in between 2006 and 2016 in the core area of Babai Valley within Bardia National Park.</p