Search
All content is free for everyone to browse, read and share. You’ll find journal articles and non-peer reviewed grey literature. Type keywords into the search box or Use the filtering options below to browse the content.
Showing 1,612 results
Agricultural intensification is a major cause of reptile and amphibian decline world-wide, prompting concern on how to best protect biodiversity in co...
Read moreHuman-dominated landscapes are characterized by a mosaic of natural and managed ecosystems, affecting arthropod communities on different spatial scale...
Read moreIdentifying landscape patterns that allow native fauna to coexist with human land use is a global challenge. Riparian vegetation often persists in ant...
Read moreSagebrush steppe ecosystems in the United States currently occur on only about one-half of their historical land area because of changes in land use, ...
Read moreCoexistence between humans and wildlife is necessary for many conservation goals but is difficult to achieve in landscapes with increasing human popul...
Read moreNarrm-Melbourne, Australia, has been at the forefront of urban biodiversity research, planning and management for 50 years in urban landscapes that ha...
Read moreIn many areas of the boreal forests and temperate mountains of Canada, resource extraction activities have created forage conditions that are favourab...
Read moreNature-based solutions (NbS) have emerged as crucial strategies to address climate change challenges, offering manifold benefits to biodiversity and c...
Read morePlant-soil feedbacks (PSFs) regulate plant growth, plant community dynamics and ecosystem functioning and are important for global biogeochemical cycl...
Read moreHabitat loss is a leading cause of global amphibian declines. Forest removal is a particularly significant threat because an estimated 82% of amphibia...
Read more