Search

Your search keyword '"Pearce-Higgins JW"' showing total 59 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Pearce-Higgins JW" Remove constraint Author: "Pearce-Higgins JW"
59 results on '"Pearce-Higgins JW"'

Search Results

1. Rare and declining bird species benefit most from designating protected areas for conservation in the UK

3. Conservation interventions can benefit species impacted by climate change

4. Climate change vulnerability assessment of species

5. A national-scale model of linear features improves predictions of farmland biodiversity

6. Hydrologically driven ecosystem processes determine the distribution and persistence of ecosystem-specialist predators under climate change

7. Changing densities of generalist species underlie apparent homogenization of UK bird communities

8. Using habitat-specific population trends to evaluate the consistency of the effect of species traits on bird population change

9. Evidence for the buffer effect operating in multiple species at a national scale

11. A horizon scan of global biological conservation issues for 2024.

12. Landscape fires disproportionally affect high conservation value temperate peatlands, meadows, and deciduous forests, but only under low moisture conditions.

13. Spring arrival of the common cuckoo at breeding grounds is strongly determined by environmental conditions in tropical Africa.

14. Collation of a century of soil invertebrate abundance data suggests long-term declines in earthworms but not tipulids.

15. Rare and declining bird species benefit most from designating protected areas for conservation in the UK.

16. A global biological conservation horizon scan of issues for 2023.

17. Setting priorities for climate change adaptation of Critical Sites in the Africa-Eurasian waterbird flyways.

18. Better utilisation and transparency of bird data collected by powerline companies.

19. Strengthening the evidence base for temperature-mediated phenological asynchrony and its impacts.

21. A Horizon Scan of Emerging Global Biological Conservation Issues for 2020.

22. Measuring the success of climate change adaptation and mitigation in terrestrial ecosystems.

23. Spatial and habitat variation in aphid, butterfly, moth and bird phenologies over the last half century.

24. A Horizon Scan of Emerging Issues for Global Conservation in 2019.

25. Evaluating the effectiveness of conservation measures for European grassland-breeding waders.

26. Tritrophic phenological match-mismatch in space and time.

27. The sensitivity of breeding songbirds to changes in seasonal timing is linked to population change but cannot be directly attributed to the effects of trophic asynchrony on productivity.

28. A 2018 Horizon Scan of Emerging Issues for Global Conservation and Biological Diversity.

29. Bird and bat species' global vulnerability to collision mortality at wind farms revealed through a trait-based assessment.

30. Climate change vulnerability for species-Assessing the assessments.

31. Climate change, climatic variation and extreme biological responses.

32. Large extents of intensive land use limit community reorganization during climate warming.

33. A 2017 Horizon Scan of Emerging Issues for Global Conservation and Biological Diversity.

34. Multi-state, multi-stage modeling of nest-success suggests interaction between weather and land-use.

35. Passerines may be sufficiently plastic to track temperature-mediated shifts in optimum lay date.

36. Population decline is linked to migration route in the Common Cuckoo.

37. Phenological sensitivity to climate across taxa and trophic levels.

38. Winter wren populations show adaptation to local climate.

39. A Horizon Scan of Global Conservation Issues for 2016.

40. Geographical variation in species' population responses to changes in temperature and precipitation.

42. Hydrologically driven ecosystem processes determine the distribution and persistence of ecosystem-specialist predators under climate change.

43. Drivers of climate change impacts on bird communities.

44. Evidence for the buffer effect operating in multiple species at a national scale.

45. Mechanisms underpinning climatic impacts on natural populations: altered species interactions are more important than direct effects.

46. Climatic effects on breeding grounds are more important drivers of breeding phenology in migrant birds than carry-over effects from wintering grounds.

47. More and more generalists: two decades of changes in the European avifauna.

48. Protected areas facilitate species' range expansions.

49. Experimental evidence for the effect of small wind turbine proximity and operation on bird and bat activity.

50. Disentangling the relative importance of changes in climate and land-use intensity in driving recent bird population trends.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources