326 results on '"Jones, Julia P. G."'
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2. Nature’s contribution to poverty alleviation, human wellbeing and the SDGs
3. The scale of the biodiversity crisis laid bare
4. The causal revolution in biodiversity conservation
5. ‘Nature positive’ must incorporate, not undermine, the mitigation hierarchy
6. Scandal in the voluntary carbon market must not impede tropical forest conservation
7. Resolving land tenure security is essential to deliver forest restoration
8. Elevated fires during COVID-19 lockdown and the vulnerability of protected areas
9. On track to achieve no net loss of forest at Madagascar’s biggest mine
10. Lessons lost: Lack of requirements for post‐project evaluation and reporting is hindering evidence‐based conservation.
11. Protected areas have a mixed impact on waterbirds, but management helps
12. Biodiversity conservation as a promising frontier for behavioural science
13. Hundreds of millions of people in the tropics need both wild harvests and other forms of economic development for their well-being
14. Biodiversity credits: learning lessons from other approaches to incentivize conservation
15. Madagascar : Crime threatens biodiversity
16. Global no net loss of natural ecosystems
17. Local conditions and policy design determine whether ecological compensation can achieve No Net Loss goals
18. Mechanical excavation of wetland habitat failed to eradicate invasive American red swamp crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) in Malta.
19. Last chance for Madagascar’s biodiversity
20. Challenges faced by Madagascar’s protected area network during COVID-19 were very real
21. A mixed methods approach for measuring topic sensitivity in conservation
22. Evaluating the impact of biodiversity offsetting on native vegetation
23. The New Natural History of Madagascar
24. Forest carbon offsets are failing: Analysis reveals emission reductions from forest conservation have been overestimated
25. 'Nature positive' must incorporate, not undermine, the mitigation hierarchy
26. 'Nature positive' must incorporate, not undermine, the mitigation hierarchy
27. Forest carbon offsets are failing: Analysis reveals emission reductions from forest conservation have been overestimated
28. Credit credibility threatens forests
29. Topic sensitivity still affects honest responding, even when specialized questioning techniques are used
30. Drivers of the Distribution of Fisher Effort at Lake Alaotra, Madagascar
31. Evaluating the impact of biodiversity offsetting on native vegetation
32. Introducing a common taxonomy to support learning from failure in conservation
33. Multiple drivers of decline in the global status of freshwater crayfish (Decapoda: Astacidea)
34. Robust study design is as important on the social as it is on the ecological side of applied ecological research
35. Diverse contributions benefit people and nature
36. Rubber's inclusion in zero‐deforestation legislation is necessary but not sufficient to reduce impacts on biodiversity.
37. Rubber needs to be included in deforestation-free commodity legislation
38. A global evaluation of the effectiveness of voluntary REDD+ projects at reducing deforestation and degradation in the moist tropics
39. Identification of 100 fundamental ecological questions
40. Who Harvests and Why? Characteristics of Guatemalan Households Harvesting Xaté (Chamaedorea ernesti-augusti)
41. Modelling the effect of individual strategic behaviour on community-level outcomes of conservation interventions
42. Botanic gardens can positively influence visitors’ environmental attitudes
43. Opinions of the public, conservationists and magistrates on sentencing wildlife trade crimes in the UK
44. Identifying indicators of illegal behaviour: carnivore killing in human-managed landscapes
45. Encounter data in resource management and ecology: pitfalls and possibilities
46. Should payments for biodiversity conservation be based on action or results?
47. The Why, What, and How of Global Biodiversity Indicators Beyond the 2010 Target
48. Monitoring species abundance and distribution at the landscape scale
49. How can ecologists help realise the potential of payments for carbon in tropical forest countries?
50. A Revised Conceptual Framework for Payments for Environmental Services
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