34 results on '"Donlan CJ"'
Search Results
2. Seafood traceability program design: Examination of the United States' Seafood Import Monitoring Program.
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Steinkruger A, Kroetz K, Malakoff KL, Gephart JA, Luque G, Lee P, Chicojay Moore K, and Donlan CJ
- Abstract
The United States' current Seafood Import Monitoring Program (SIMP) and a potential extension are undergoing review, yet quantitative evaluation of the current program is lacking. The SIMP is a traceability program aimed at reducing imports of seafood products that are of illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) origin or associated with seafood fraud. We conducted a quantitative examination of the SIMP's current scope and design by synthesizing publicly available trade data along with measures of IUU fishing and seafood mislabeling. We found prioritized shipments amounted to 33% of 2016 imported tonnage. The SIMP species groups had higher IUU scores and mislabeling rates relative to non-SIMP groups, but the difference was consistent with random prioritization suggesting potential benefits from program expansion. Furthermore, two-thirds of imported volume lacked a mislabeling rate and 5% lacked species information, underlining the urgent need for improved open-access data on globalized seafood supply chains., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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3. An impact evaluation of conservation investments targeting long-distance migratory species.
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Donlan CJ, Eusse-González D, Luque GM, Reiter ME, Ruiz-Gutierrez V, Allen MC, Johnston-González R, Robinson OJ, Fernández G, Palacios E, and Valenzuela J
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- Animals, Population Dynamics, Conservation of Natural Resources methods, Birds physiology, Animal Migration
- Abstract
We evaluated the impact of a philanthropic program investing in the conservation of sites along the Pacific Americas Flyway, which spans >16,000 km of coastline and is used by millions of shorebirds. Using a quasi-experimental, mixed methods approach, we estimated what would have happened to shorebird populations at 17 wintering sites without the sustained and additional investment they received. We modeled shorebird populations across the entire flyway and at sites with and without investment. Combining shorebird abundance estimates with a land-cover classification model, we used the synthetic control method to create counterfactuals for shorebird trends at the treatment sites. We found no evidence of an overall effect across three outcome variables. Species- and site-level treatment effects were heterogeneous, with a few cases showing evidence of a positive effect, including a site with a high level of overall investment. Results suggest six shorebirds declined across the entire flyway, including at many Latin American sites. However, the percentage of flyway populations present at the sites remained stable, and the percentage at the treatment sites was higher (i.e., investment sites) than at control sites. Multiple mechanisms behind our results are possible, including that investments have yet to mitigate impacts and negative impacts at other sites are driving declines at the treatment sites. A limitation of our evaluation is the sole focus on shorebird abundance and the lack of data that prohibits the inclusion of other outcome variables. Monitoring infrastructure is now in place to design a more robust and a priori shorebird evaluation framework across the entire flyway. With this framework, it will prove easier to prioritize limited dollars to result in the most positive conservation outcomes., (© 2023 The Authors. Conservation Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology.)
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- 2024
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4. Author Correction: Estimating illegal fishing from enforcement officers.
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Donlan CJ, Wilcox C, Luque GM, and Gelcich S
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- 2021
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5. Consequences of seafood mislabeling for marine populations and fisheries management.
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Kroetz K, Luque GM, Gephart JA, Jardine SL, Lee P, Chicojay Moore K, Cole C, Steinkruger A, and Donlan CJ
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- Food Supply, Geography, United States, Aquatic Organisms growth & development, Fisheries, Food Labeling, Seafood
- Abstract
Over the past decade, seafood mislabeling has been increasingly documented, raising public concern over the identity, safety, and sustainability of seafood. Negative outcomes from seafood mislabeling are suspected to be substantial and pervasive as seafood is the world's most highly traded food commodity. Here we provide empirical systems-level evidence that enabling conditions exist for seafood mislabeling in the United States (US) to lead to negative impacts on marine populations and support consumption of products from poorly managed fisheries. Using trade, production, and mislabeling data, we determine that substituted products are more likely to be imported than the product listed on the label. We also estimate that about 60% of US mislabeled apparent consumption associated with the established pairs involves products that are exclusively wild caught. We use these wild-caught pairs to explore population and management consequences of mislabeling. We find that, compared to the product on the label, substituted products come from fisheries with less healthy stocks and greater impacts of fishing on other species. Additionally, substituted products are from fisheries with less effective management and with management policies less likely to mitigate impacts of fishing on habitats and ecosystems compared with the label product. While we provide systematic evidence of environmental impacts from food fraud, our results also highlight the current challenges with production, trade, and mislabeling data, which increase the uncertainty surrounding seafood mislabeling consequences. More integrated, holistic, and collaborative approaches are needed to understand mislabeling impacts and design interventions to minimize mislabeling., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing interest., (Copyright © 2020 the Author(s). Published by PNAS.)
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- 2020
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6. Estimating illegal fishing from enforcement officers.
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Donlan CJ, Wilcox C, Luque GM, and Gelcich S
- Abstract
While illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing is a premier issue facing ocean sustainability, characterizing it is challenging due to its clandestine nature. Current approaches can be resource intensive and sometimes controversial. Using Chile as an example, we present a structured process leveraging existing capacity, fisheries officers, that provides a monitoring tool to produce transparent and stand-alone estimates on the level, structure, and characteristics of illegal fishing. We provide a national illegal fishing baseline for Chile, estimating illegal activity for 20 fisheries, representing ~ 70% of annual national landings. For four fisheries, we also estimate the relative importance of illegal activities across sectors, stakeholders, and infrastructure. While providing new information, our results also confirm previous evidence on the general patterns of illegality. Our approach provides an opportunity for government agencies to formalize their institutional knowledge, while accounting for potential biases and reducing fragmentation of knowledge that can prevent effective enforcement. Estimating illegal activity directly from fisheries enforcement officers is complementary to existing approaches, providing a cost-effective, rapid, and rigorous method to measure, monitor, and inform solutions to reduce IUU fishing.
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- 2020
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7. Scaling participation in payments for ecosystem services programs.
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Sorice MG, Donlan CJ, Boyle KJ, Xu W, and Gelcich S
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- Algorithms, Conservation of Natural Resources methods, Employment organization & administration, Fisheries, Humans, Models, Theoretical, Program Development, Research economics, Research organization & administration, Community Participation, Conservation of Natural Resources economics, Ecosystem, Employment economics
- Abstract
Payments for ecosystem services programs have become common tools but most have failed to achieve wide-ranging conservation outcomes. The capacity for scale and impact increases when PES programs are designed through the lens of the potential participants, yet this has received little attention in research or practice. Our work with small-scale marine fisheries integrates the social science of PES programs and provides a framework for designing programs that focus a priori on scaling. In addition to payments, desirable non-monetary program attributes and ecological feedbacks attract a wider range of potential participants into PES programs, including those who have more negative attitudes and lower trust. Designing programs that draw individuals into participating in PES programs is likely the most strategic path to reaching scale. Research should engage in new models of participatory research to understand these dynamics and to design programs that explicitly integrate a broad range of needs, values, and modes of implementation.
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- 2018
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8. Achieving biodiversity benefits with offsets: Research gaps, challenges, and needs.
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Gelcich S, Vargas C, Carreras MJ, Castilla JC, and Donlan CJ
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- Biodiversity, Conservation of Natural Resources legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
Biodiversity offsets are becoming increasingly common across a portfolio of settings: national policy, voluntary programs, international lending, and corporate business structures. Given the diversity of ecological, political, and socio-economic systems where offsets may be applied, place-based information is likely to be most useful in designing and implementing offset programs, along with guiding principles that assure best practice. We reviewed the research on biodiversity offsets to explore gaps and needs. While the peer-reviewed literature on offsets is growing rapidly, it is heavily dominated by ecological theory, wetland ecosystems, and U.S.-based research. Given that majority of offset policies and programs are occurring in middle- and low-income countries, the research gaps we identified present a number of risks. They also present an opportunity to create regionally based learning platforms focused on pilot projects and institutional capacity building. Scientific research should diversify, both topically and geographically, in order to support the successful design, implementation, and monitoring of biodiversity offset programs.
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- 2017
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9. The potential for biodiversity offsetting to fund invasive species eradications on islands.
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Holmes ND, Howald GR, Wegmann AS, Donlan CJ, Finkelstein M, and Keitt B
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- Animals, Biodiversity, Conservation of Natural Resources economics, Conservation of Natural Resources methods, Introduced Species, Mammals physiology, Pest Control economics, Pest Control methods
- Published
- 2016
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10. Science for a wilder Anthropocene: Synthesis and future directions for trophic rewilding research.
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Svenning JC, Pedersen PB, Donlan CJ, Ejrnæs R, Faurby S, Galetti M, Hansen DM, Sandel B, Sandom CJ, Terborgh JW, and Vera FW
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- Animals, Climate Change, Humans, Research, Science, Synthetic Biology, Conservation of Natural Resources, Ecosystem
- Abstract
Trophic rewilding is an ecological restoration strategy that uses species introductions to restore top-down trophic interactions and associated trophic cascades to promote self-regulating biodiverse ecosystems. Given the importance of large animals in trophic cascades and their widespread losses and resulting trophic downgrading, it often focuses on restoring functional megafaunas. Trophic rewilding is increasingly being implemented for conservation, but remains controversial. Here, we provide a synthesis of its current scientific basis, highlighting trophic cascades as the key conceptual framework, discussing the main lessons learned from ongoing rewilding projects, systematically reviewing the current literature, and highlighting unintentional rewilding and spontaneous wildlife comebacks as underused sources of information. Together, these lines of evidence show that trophic cascades may be restored via species reintroductions and ecological replacements. It is clear, however, that megafauna effects may be affected by poorly understood trophic complexity effects and interactions with landscape settings, human activities, and other factors. Unfortunately, empirical research on trophic rewilding is still rare, fragmented, and geographically biased, with the literature dominated by essays and opinion pieces. We highlight the need for applied programs to include hypothesis testing and science-based monitoring, and outline priorities for future research, notably assessing the role of trophic complexity, interplay with landscape settings, land use, and climate change, as well as developing the global scope for rewilding and tools to optimize benefits and reduce human-wildlife conflicts. Finally, we recommend developing a decision framework for species selection, building on functional and phylogenetic information and with attention to the potential contribution from synthetic biology.
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- 2016
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11. Reply to Rubenstein and Rubenstein: Time to move on from ideological debates on rewilding.
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Svenning JC, Pedersen PB, Donlan CJ, Ejrnæs R, Faurby S, Galetti M, Hansen DM, Sandel B, Sandom CJ, Terborgh JW, and Vera FW
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- Animals, Humans, Conservation of Natural Resources, Ecosystem
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- 2016
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12. A human-centered framework for innovation in conservation incentive programs.
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Sorice MG and Donlan CJ
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- Community Participation, Humans, Conservation of Natural Resources economics, Conservation of Natural Resources methods, Motivation
- Abstract
The promise of environmental conservation incentive programs that provide direct payments in exchange for conservation outcomes is that they enhance the value of engaging in stewardship behaviors. An insidious but important concern is that a narrow focus on optimizing payment levels can ultimately suppress program participation and subvert participants' internal motivation to engage in long-term conservation behaviors. Increasing participation and engendering stewardship can be achieved by recognizing that participation is not simply a function of the payment; it is a function of the overall structure and administration of the program. Key to creating innovative and more sustainable programs is fitting them within the existing needs and values of target participants. By focusing on empathy for participants, co-designing program approaches, and learning from the rapid prototyping of program concepts, a human-centered approach to conservation incentive program design enhances the propensity for discovery of novel and innovative solutions to pressing conservation issues.
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- 2015
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13. Incentivizing biodiversity conservation in artisanal fishing communities through territorial user rights and business model innovation.
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Gelcich S and Donlan CJ
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- Animals, Chile, Conservation of Natural Resources economics, Conservation of Natural Resources legislation & jurisprudence, Fisheries economics, Fisheries legislation & jurisprudence, Fishes, Invertebrates, Motivation, Biodiversity, Conservation of Natural Resources methods, Environmental Policy economics, Fisheries methods
- Abstract
Territorial user rights for fisheries are being promoted to enhance the sustainability of small-scale fisheries. Using Chile as a case study, we designed a market-based program aimed at improving fishers' livelihoods while incentivizing the establishment and enforcement of no-take areas within areas managed with territorial user right regimes. Building on explicit enabling conditions (i.e., high levels of governance, participation, and empowerment), we used a place-based, human-centered approach to design a program that will have the necessary support and buy-in from local fishers to result in landscape-scale biodiversity benefits. Transactional infrastructure must be complex enough to capture the biodiversity benefits being created, but simple enough so that the program can be scaled up and is attractive to potential financiers. Biodiversity benefits created must be commoditized, and desired behavioral changes must be verified within a transactional context. Demand must be generated for fisher-created biodiversity benefits in order to attract financing and to scale the market model. Important design decisions around these 3 components-supply, transactional infrastructure, and demand-must be made based on local social-ecological conditions. Our market model, which is being piloted in Chile, is a flexible foundation on which to base scalable opportunities to operationalize a scheme that incentivizes local, verifiable biodiversity benefits via conservation behaviors by fishers that could likely result in significant marine conservation gains and novel cross-sector alliances., (© 2015, Society for Conservation Biology.)
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- 2015
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14. Ecology: Gene tweaking for conservation.
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Thomas MA, Roemer GW, Donlan CJ, Dickson BG, Matocq M, and Malaney J
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- Animals, Climate Change statistics & numerical data, Directed Molecular Evolution, Ecology methods, Endangered Species, Genetic Enhancement, Hybridization, Genetic, Adaptation, Physiological genetics, Biodiversity, Conservation of Natural Resources methods, Extinction, Biological, Genetic Engineering methods
- Published
- 2013
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15. Increasing participation in incentive programs for biodiversity conservation.
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Sorice MG, Oh CO, Gartner T, Snieckus M, Johnson R, and Donlan CJ
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- Animals, Environmental Monitoring, Time Factors, Biodiversity, Conservation of Natural Resources economics, Conservation of Natural Resources methods
- Abstract
Engaging private landowners in conservation activities for imperiled species is critical to maintaining and enhancing biodiversity. Market-based approaches can incentivize conservation behaviors on private lands by shifting the benefit-cost ratio of engaging in activities that result in net conservation benefits for target species. In the United States and elsewhere, voluntary conservation agreements with financial incentives are becoming an increasingly common strategy. While the influence of program design and delivery of voluntary conservation programs is often overlooked, these aspects are critical to achieving the necessary participation to attain landscape-scale outcomes. Using a sample of family-forest landowners in the southeast United States, we show how preferences for participation in a conservation program to protect an at-risk species, the gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus), are related to program structure, delivery, and perceived efficacy. Landowners were most sensitive to programs that are highly controlling, require permanent conservation easements, and put landowners at risk for future regulation. Programs designed with greater levels of compensation and that support landowners' autonomy to make land management decisions can increase participation and increase landowner acceptance of program components that are generally unfavorable, like long-term contracts and permanent easements. There is an inherent trade-off between maximizing participation and maximizing the conservation benefits when designing a conservation incentive program. For conservation programs targeting private lands to achieve landscape-level benefits, they must attract a critical level of participation that creates a connected mosaic of conservation benefits. Yet, programs with attributes that strive to maximize conservation benefits within a single agreement (and reduce risks of failure) are likely to have lower participation, and thus lower landscape benefits. Achieving levels of landowner participation in conservation agreement programs that deliver lasting, landscape-level benefits requires careful attention not only to how the program structure influences potential conservation benefits, but also how it influences landowners and their potential to participate.
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- 2013
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16. Archipelago-wide island restoration in the Galápagos Islands: reducing costs of invasive mammal eradication programs and reinvasion risk.
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Carrion V, Donlan CJ, Campbell KJ, Lavoie C, and Cruz F
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- Animals, Biodiversity, Ecuador, Goats, Conservation of Natural Resources economics, Cost Control, Ecosystem
- Abstract
Invasive alien mammals are the major driver of biodiversity loss and ecosystem degradation on islands. Over the past three decades, invasive mammal eradication from islands has become one of society's most powerful tools for preventing extinction of insular endemics and restoring insular ecosystems. As practitioners tackle larger islands for restoration, three factors will heavily influence success and outcomes: the degree of local support, the ability to mitigate for non-target impacts, and the ability to eradicate non-native species more cost-effectively. Investments in removing invasive species, however, must be weighed against the risk of reintroduction. One way to reduce reintroduction risks is to eradicate the target invasive species from an entire archipelago, and thus eliminate readily available sources. We illustrate the costs and benefits of this approach with the efforts to remove invasive goats from the Galápagos Islands. Project Isabela, the world's largest island restoration effort to date, removed >140,000 goats from >500,000 ha for a cost of US$10.5 million. Leveraging the capacity built during Project Isabela, and given that goat reintroductions have been common over the past decade, we implemented an archipelago-wide goat eradication strategy. Feral goats remain on three islands in the archipelago, and removal efforts are underway. Efforts on the Galápagos Islands demonstrate that for some species, island size is no longer the limiting factor with respect to eradication. Rather, bureaucratic processes, financing, political will, and stakeholder approval appear to be the new challenges. Eradication efforts have delivered a suite of biodiversity benefits that are in the process of revealing themselves. The costs of rectifying intentional reintroductions are high in terms of financial and human resources. Reducing the archipelago-wide goat density to low levels is a technical approach to reducing reintroduction risk in the short-term, and is being complemented with a longer-term social approach focused on education and governance.
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- 2011
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17. Biodiversity offsets: a cost-effective interim solution to seabird bycatch in fisheries?
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Pascoe S, Wilcox C, and Donlan CJ
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- Animals, Australia, Biodiversity, Birds physiology, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Feeding Behavior, Fisheries
- Abstract
The concept of biodiversity offsets is well established as an approach to environmental management. The concept has been suggested for environmental management in fisheries, particularly in relation to the substantial numbers of non-target species--seabirds in particular--caught and killed as incidental bycatch during fishing activities. Substantial areas of fisheries are being closed to protect these species at great cost to the fishing industry. However, other actions may be taken to offset the impact of fishing on these populations at lower cost to the fishing industry. This idea, however, has attracted severe criticism largely as it does not address the underlying externality problems created by the fishing sector, namely seabird fishing mortality. In this paper, we re-examine the potential role of compensatory mitigation as a fisheries management tool, although from the perspective of being an interim management measure while more long-lasting solutions to the problem are found. We re-model an example previously examined by both proponents and opponents of the approach, namely the cost effectiveness of rodent control relative to fishery area closures for the conservation of a seabird population adversely affected by an Australian tuna fishery. We find that, in the example being examined, invasive rodent eradication is at least 10 times more cost effective than area closures. We conclude that, while this does not solve the actual bycatch problem, it may provide breathing space for both the seabird species and the industry to find longer term means of reducing bycatch.
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- 2011
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18. Using expert opinion surveys to rank threats to endangered species: a case study with sea turtles.
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Donlan CJ, Wingfield DK, Crowder LB, and Wilcox C
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- Animals, Data Collection methods, Observer Variation, Uncertainty, Conservation of Natural Resources, Endangered Species, Expert Testimony, Risk Assessment, Turtles
- Abstract
Little is known about how specific anthropogenic hazards affect the biology of organisms. Quantifying the effect of regional hazards is particularly challenging for species such as sea turtles because they are migratory, difficult to study, long lived, and face multiple anthropogenic threats. Expert elicitation, a technique used to synthesize opinions of experts while assessing uncertainty around those views, has been in use for several decades in the social science and risk assessment sectors. We conducted an internet-based survey to quantify expert opinion on the relative magnitude of anthropogenic hazards to sea turtle populations at the regional level. Fisheries bycatch and coastal development were most often ranked as the top hazards to sea turtle species in a geographic region. Nest predation and direct take followed as the second and third greatest threats, respectively. Survey results suggest most experts believe sea turtles are threatened by multiple factors, including substantial at-sea threats such as fisheries bycatch. Resources invested by the sea turtle community, however, appear biased toward terrestrial-based impacts. Results from the survey are useful for conservation planning because they provide estimates of relative impacts of hazards on sea turtles and a measure of consensus on the magnitude of those impacts among researchers and practitioners. Our survey results also revealed patterns of expert bias, which we controlled for in our analysis. Respondents with no experience with respect to a sea turtle species tended to rank hazards affecting that sea turtle species higher than respondents with experience. A more-striking pattern was with hazard-based expertise: the more experience a respondent had with a specific hazard, the higher the respondent scored the impact of that hazard on sea turtle populations. Bias-controlled expert opinion surveys focused on threatened species and their hazards can help guide and expedite species recovery plans., (© 2010 Society for Conservation Biology.)
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- 2010
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19. Need for a clear and fair evaluation of biodiversity offsets for fisheries bycatch.
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Wilcox C and Donlan CJ
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- Animals, Birds, Conservation of Natural Resources methods, Fisheries methods, Fisheries standards, Introduced Species, Marine Biology, Turtles
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- 2009
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20. High-impact conservation: invasive mammal eradications from the islands of western México.
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Aguirre-Muñoz A, Croll DA, Donlan CJ, Henry RW 3rd, Hermosillo MA, Howald GR, Keitt BS, Luna-Mendoza L, Rodríguez-Malagón M, Salas-Flores LM, Samaniego-Herrera A, Sanchez-Pacheco JA, Sheppard J, Tershy BR, Toro-Benito J, Wolf S, and Wood B
- Subjects
- Animals, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Mexico, Species Specificity, Conservation of Natural Resources economics, Mammals
- Abstract
Islands harbor a disproportionate amount of the earth's biodiversity, but a significant portion has been lost due in large part to the impacts of invasive mammals. Fortunately, invasive mammals can be routinely removed from islands, providing a powerful tool to prevent extinctions and restore ecosystems. Given that invasive mammals are still present on more than 80% of the world's major islands groups and remain a premier threat to the earth's biodiversity, it is important to disseminate replicable, scaleable models to eradicate invasive mammals from islands. We report on a successful model from western México during the past decade. A collaborative effort between nongovernmental organizations, academic biologists, Mexican government agencies, and local individuals has resulted in major restoration efforts in three island archipelagos. Forty-two populations of invasive mammals have been eradicated from 26 islands. For a cost of USD 21,615 per colony and USD 49,370 per taxon, 201 seabird colonies and 88 endemic terrestrial taxa have been protected, respectively. These conservation successes are a result of an operational model with three main components: i) a tri-national collaboration that integrates research, prioritization, financing, public education, policy work, capacity building, conservation action, monitoring, and evaluation; ii) proactive and dedicated natural resource management agencies; and iii) effective partnerships with academic researchers in Mexico and the United States. What is now needed is a detailed plan to eradicate invasive mammals from the remaining islands in the region that integrates the needed additional financing, capacity, technical advances, and policy issues. Island conservation in western Mexico provides an effective approach that can be readily applied to other archipelagos where conservation efforts have been limited.
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- 2008
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21. Invasive rodent eradication on islands.
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Howald G, Donlan CJ, Galván JP, Russell JC, Parkes J, Samaniego A, Wang Y, Veitch D, Genovesi P, Pascal M, Saunders A, and Tershy B
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- Animals, Conservation of Natural Resources economics, Geography, Biodiversity, Conservation of Natural Resources methods, Rodentia
- Abstract
Invasive mammals are the greatest threat to island biodiversity and invasive rodents are likely responsible for the greatest number of extinctions and ecosystem changes. Techniques for eradicating rodents from islands were developed over 2 decades ago. Since that time there has been a significant development and application of this conservation tool. We reviewed the literature on invasive rodent eradications to assess its current state and identify actions to make it more effective. Worldwide, 332 successful rodent eradications have been undertaken; we identified 35 failed eradications and 20 campaigns of unknown result. Invasive rodents have been eradicated from 284 islands (47,628 ha). With the exception of two small islands, rodenticides were used in all eradication campaigns. Brodifacoum was used in 71% of campaigns and 91% of the total area treated. The most frequent rodenticide distribution methods (from most to least) are bait stations, hand broadcasting, and aerial broadcasting. Nevertheless, campaigns using aerial broadcast made up 76% of the total area treated. Mortality of native vertebrates due to nontarget poisoning has been documented, but affected species quickly recover to pre-eradication population levels or higher. A variety of methods have been developed to mitigate nontarget impacts, and applied research can further aid in minimizing impacts. Land managers should routinely remove invasive rodents from islands <100 ha that lack vertebrates susceptible to nontarget poisoning. For larger islands and those that require nontarget mitigation, expert consultation and greater planning effort are needed. With the exception of house mice (Mus musculus), island size may no longer be the limiting factor for rodent eradications; rather, social acceptance and funding may be the main challenges. To be successful, large-scale rodent campaigns should be integrated with programs to improve the livelihoods of residents, island biosecurity, and reinvasion response programs.
- Published
- 2007
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22. Restoring America's big, wild animals.
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Donlan CJ
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- Animals, Artiodactyla, Carnivora, Climate, Ecosystem, Elephants, History, Ancient, Horses, North America, Xenarthra, Animals, Wild, Conservation of Natural Resources methods
- Published
- 2007
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23. Coupling stable isotopes with bioenergetics to estimate interspecific interactions.
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Caut S, Roemer GW, Donlan CJ, and Courchamp F
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- Animals, Biomarkers, Diet, Foxes physiology, Mephitidae physiology, Raptors physiology, Swine physiology, Food Chain, Isotopes metabolism, Models, Biological, Predatory Behavior physiology
- Abstract
Interspecific interactions are often difficult to elucidate, particularly with large vertebrates at large spatial scales. Here, we describe a methodology for estimating interspecific interactions by combining stable isotopes with bioenergetics. We illustrate this approach by modeling the population dynamics and species interactions of a suite of vertebrates on Santa Cruz Island, California, USA: two endemic carnivores (the island fox and island spotted skunk), an exotic herbivore (the feral pig), and their shared predator, the Golden Eagle. Sensitivity analyses suggest that our parameter estimates are robust, and natural history observations suggest that our overall approach captures the species interactions in this vertebrate community. Nonetheless, several factors provide challenges to using isotopes to infer species interactions. Knowledge regarding species-specific isotopic fractionation and diet breadth is often lacking, necessitating detailed laboratory studies and natural history information. However, when coupled with other approaches, including bioenergetics, mechanistic models, and natural history, stable isotopes can be powerful tools in illuminating interspecific interactions and community dynamics.
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- 2006
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24. Nested communities, invasive species and Holocene extinctions: evaluating the power of a potential conservation tool.
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Donlan CJ, Knowlton J, Doak DF, and Biavaschi N
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- Animals, Mexico, Population Dynamics, Species Specificity, Conservation of Natural Resources methods, Ecology methods, Ecosystem, Geography, Mammals physiology, Models, Theoretical
- Abstract
General ecological methods and models that require a minimum amount of information yet are still able to inform conservation planning are particularly valuable. Nested subset analysis has been advocated as such a tool for the prediction of extinction-prone species and populations. However, such advocacy has not been without skepticism and debate, and in the majority of published examples assessing extinction vulnerability, actual extinctions are based on assumptions rather than direct evidence. Here, we empirically test the power of nested subset analysis to predict extinction-prone species, using documented Holocene insular mammal extinctions on three island archipelagos off the west coast of North America. We go on to test whether the introduction of invasive mammals promotes nestedness on islands via extinction. While all three archipelagos were significantly nested before and after the extinction events, nested subset analysis largely failed to predict extinction patterns. We also failed to detect any correlations between the degree of nestedness at the genus-level with area, isolation, or species richness and extinction risk. Biogeography tools, such as nested subset analysis, must be critically evaluated before they are prescribed widely for conservation planning. For these island archipelagos, it appears detailed natural history and taxa-specific ecology may prove critical in predicting patterns of extinction risk.
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- 2005
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25. Golden eagles, feral pigs, and insular carnivores: how exotic species turn native predators into prey.
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Roemer GW, Donlan CJ, and Courchamp F
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- Animals, Animals, Wild, California, Eagles, Female, Food Chain, Foxes, Male, Mephitidae, Models, Biological, Population Dynamics, Swine, Carnivora physiology, Ecosystem, Predatory Behavior
- Abstract
Island ecosystems are particularly vulnerable to exotic species. Here we show how an introduced prey has led to the wholesale restructuring of an island food web, including the near extinction of an endemic carnivore. Introduced pigs, by providing abundant food, enabled golden eagles to colonize the California Channel Islands. Eagles preyed heavily on the island fox, whose resulting decline toward extinction released populations of the competitively inferior island skunk. The presence of exotic pigs led to major ecosystem shifts by indirectly causing predation to replace competition as the dominant force shaping these island communities.
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- 2002
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26. Efficacy of 67Ga-scintigraphy in predicting the diagnostic yield of transbronchial lung biopsy in pulmonary sarcoidosis.
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Ackart RS, Munzel TL, Rodriguez JJ, Donlan CJ, Klayton RJ, and Foreman DR
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- Biopsy, Needle, False Negative Reactions, False Positive Reactions, Humans, Lung Diseases pathology, Radionuclide Imaging, Sarcoidosis pathology, Gallium Radioisotopes, Lung Diseases diagnostic imaging, Sarcoidosis diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Nineteen consecutive patients with clinically suspected sarcoidosis underwent 67Ga-scintigraphy prior to transbronchial lung biopsy (TBLB) to determine if 67Ga uptake in lung parenchyma would increase the diagnostic yield of the biopsy procedure. Biopsies were obtained from the areas showing parenchymal uptake on the 67Ga scan in 13 of the 19 patients. In the six patients not demonstrating uptake of 67Ga in the lung parenchyma, biopsies were obtained at random from the right lower lobe. There was no correlation between 67Ga uptake in hilar nodes or pulmonary parenchyma tissue and the diagnostic yield from TBLB. We conclude that 67Ga scanning is neither efficacious nor cost-effective in predicting the diagnostic yield of TBLB in sarcoidosis.
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- 1982
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27. Fiberoptic bronchoscopy in outpatient facilities, 1982.
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Ackart RS, Foreman DR, Klayton RJ, Donlan CJ, Munzel TL, and Schuler MA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Bronchoscopy adverse effects, Bronchoscopy methods, Child, Fiber Optic Technology, Humans, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Risk, Ambulatory Care standards, Bronchoscopy trends, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care
- Published
- 1983
28. Hodgkin's disease presenting as relapsing polychondritis. A previously undescribed association.
- Author
-
Miller SB, Donlan CJ, and Roth SB
- Subjects
- Alkaline Phosphatase blood, Blood Glucose analysis, Cartilage pathology, Drug Therapy, Combination, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy, Hodgkin Disease pathology, Humans, Male, Methotrexate therapeutic use, Middle Aged, Nitrogen Mustard Compounds therapeutic use, Polychondritis, Relapsing drug therapy, Prednisone therapeutic use, Procarbazine therapeutic use, Spleen pathology, Vincristine therapeutic use, Hodgkin Disease complications, Polychondritis, Relapsing etiology
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Fiberoptic bronchoscopy in nonhospitalized patients.
- Author
-
Donlan CJ Jr, Foreman DR, and Klayton RJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Ambulatory Care, Carcinoma, Bronchogenic diagnosis, Female, Humans, Lung Neoplasms diagnosis, Male, Middle Aged, Bronchoscopy adverse effects, Bronchoscopy methods, Fiber Optic Technology, Lung Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
Fiberoptic bronchoscopy is employed extensively in the examination of patients with pulmonary disease. As demonstrated in this large series, the procedure can be performed safely and efficiently on an outpatient basis, with the use of only topical anesthesia. Discomfort is minimal and readily accepted by most patients. Bronchial biopsies of suspected neoplastic lesions can be performed without difficulty. Outpatient bronchoscopy in an appropriate clinical setting can hasten the medical evaluation without compromising patient care.
- Published
- 1978
30. Transient eosinophilic pneumonia secondary to use of a vaginal cream.
- Author
-
Donlan CJ Jr and Scutero JV
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Pulmonary Eosinophilia diagnostic imaging, Radiography, Sulfanilamides administration & dosage, Sulfanilamides therapeutic use, Drug Hypersensitivity diagnostic imaging, Pulmonary Eosinophilia chemically induced, Sulfanilamides adverse effects, Vaginitis drug therapy
- Abstract
Various drugs have been implicated in the development of transient eosinophilic pneumonia or Loeffler's syndrome. We present such a case occurring in a woman who had been using a sulfanilamide-containing vaginal cream.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Endobronchial Hodgkin's disease.
- Author
-
Donlan CJ Jr and Reid JW
- Subjects
- Adult, Antineoplastic Agents administration & dosage, Bronchoscopy, Drug Therapy, Combination methods, Female, Humans, Recurrence, Bronchial Neoplasms diagnosis, Bronchial Neoplasms drug therapy, Hodgkin Disease diagnosis, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy
- Abstract
Endobronchial involvement with Hodgkin's disease has been reported infrequently. A 26-year-old woman with previously diagnosed nodular sclerosing Hodgkin's disease had substernal chest pain and a right middle lobe infiltrate. Fiberoptic bronchoscopy showed nodular endobronchial lesions located at the carina, the right mainstem bronchus, and the right middle lobe orifice. A biopsy specimen of one of these lesions showed Hodgkin's disease. The patient was then treated with sequential systemic chemotherapy. Repeated bronchoscopy showed complete resolution of the endobronchial lesions, and the patient has remained in complete remission for 24 months.
- Published
- 1978
32. Pulmonary emphysema and liver disease. Occurrence in an alpha-antitrypsin-deficient adult.
- Author
-
Donlan CJ Jr, Ross DG, Golembieski M, and Scutero JV
- Subjects
- Biopsy, Female, Humans, Hypersplenism etiology, Hypertension, Portal etiology, Liver pathology, Liver Diseases pathology, Lung pathology, Middle Aged, Radiography, Thoracic, Liver Diseases etiology, Pulmonary Emphysema etiology, alpha 1-Antitrypsin Deficiency
- Abstract
An elderly woman manifested both pulmonary and hepatic disease secondary to alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency. The liver biopsy specimen showed the characteristic findings of this condition, most importantly, the presence of PAS-positive, diastase-resistant intracytoplasmic inclusions.
- Published
- 1975
33. Letter: Foreign body removal via fiberoptic bronchoscopy.
- Author
-
Klayton RJ, Donlan CJ, O'Neil TJ, and Foreman DR
- Subjects
- Adult, Fiber Optic Technology, Humans, Male, Bronchi, Bronchoscopy, Foreign Bodies therapy
- Published
- 1975
34. Cardiac tamponade in procainamide induced lupus erythematosus.
- Author
-
Donlan CJ Jr and Forker AD
- Subjects
- Cardiac Tamponade complications, Humans, Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic complications, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction drug therapy, Pericardial Effusion chemically induced, Pericardial Effusion complications, Pleurisy chemically induced, Pleurisy complications, Cardiac Tamponade chemically induced, Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic chemically induced, Procainamide adverse effects
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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