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  1. Article

    Open Access

    Mammal responses to global changes in human activity vary by trophic group and landscape

    Wildlife must adapt to human presence to survive in the Anthropocene, so it is critical to understand species responses to humans in different contexts. We used camera trap** as a lens to view mammal respons...

    A. Cole Burton, Christopher Beirne, Kaitlyn M. Gaynor in Nature Ecology & Evolution (2024)

  2. Article

    Open Access

    Socio-ecological factors shape the distribution of a cultural keystone species in Malaysian Borneo

    Biophysical and socio-cultural factors have jointly shaped the distribution of global biodiversity, yet relatively few studies have quantitatively assessed the influence of social and ecological landscapes on ...

    David J. Kurz, Thomas Connor, Jedediah F. Brodie, Esther L. Baking in npj Biodiversity (2023)

  3. No Access

    Article

    Determinants of sun bear Helarctos malayanus habitat use in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo and its predicted distribution under future forest degradation and loss

    Habitat loss, habitat degradation and poaching threaten the survival of large mammals in Southeast Asia. Studies on these threats tend to focus on small spatial scales (i.e. a protected area), precluding regio...

    Roshan Guharajan, Jesse F. Abrams, Nicola K. Abram in Biodiversity and Conservation (2023)

  4. No Access

    Article

    Food availability alters community co-occurrence patterns at fine spatiotemporal scales in a tropical masting system

    Patterns of co-occurrence among species can help reveal the structure and assembly of ecological communities. However, studies have been limited by measuring co-occurrence in either space or time but not both ...

    Peter Jeffrey Williams, Anna K. Moeller, Alys Granados, Henry Bernard in Oecologia (2022)

  5. No Access

    Article

    Persistence of mammals in a selectively logged forest in Malaysian Borneo

    Many tropical mammals with important functional roles in forest ecosystems are threatened with extinction, yet how they respond to increasingly prevalent habitat disturbance, such as selective logging, is not ...

    Alys Granados, Kyle Crowther, Jedediah F. Brodie, Henry Bernard in Mammalian Biology (2016)

  6. No Access

    Chapter

    Persistence of Tropical Asian Ungulates in the Face of Hunting and Climate Change

    Understanding how climate change and hunting influence population persistence is crucial for the conservation of animals such as ungulates that are economically important and also serve important ecological ro...

    Alys Granados, Jedediah F. Brodie in The Ecology of Large Herbivores in South a… (2016)