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Land use (e.g. urbanization, agriculture, natural lands management) may directly affect populations by habitat loss and fragmentation, and indirectly ...
Read moreModern agriculture, in seeking to maximize yields to meet growing global food demand, has caused loss of soil organic carbon (SOC) and compaction, imp...
Read moreDespite high levels of disturbance and habitat modification, urban ecosystems still host substantial levels of biodiversity. The processes that mainta...
Read moreUrban areas have become epicentres for applied ecological and conservation research and policy. Yet, most urban areas have surprisingly little consoli...
Read moreMature urban trees improve air quality, reduce storm water run-off and sequester carbon. Municipal agencies establish forests of native juvenile trees...
Read moreThe term 'urban beekeeping' connotes a host of meanings-sociopolitical, commercial, ecological and personal-beyond the mere description of where bees ...
Read moreIn a rapidly urbanising world, the ability of plant species to survive and build self-sustaining populations in urban environments is increasingly imp...
Read moreCities have pushed forward re-naturing initiatives in local planning agendas. Discourses and rationales for such interventions tend to follow instrume...
Read more1. Urbanization gradients influence both landscape and climate and provide opportunity for understanding how plants and pollinators respond to artific...
Read moreA mathematical relationship between fox home range size and population density was derived from the literature and combined with behavioural data on m...
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