Results 181 to 190 of about 154,504 (264)
Abstract Socially vulnerable communities within the contiguous United States (CONUS) face disproportionate heat exposure, yet how these disparities will change under future warming remains unclear. Although socially vulnerable communities already experience higher air temperatures, high‐resolution downscaled climate projections have not been used to ...
L. A. Parsons +7 more
wiley +1 more source
Fire regime change in western Tasmania between 1830 and 2025
Sketches by N.J.B. Plomley of George Augustus Robinson western Tasmanian expeditions in 1830 and 1833, undertaken to persuade Aboriginal nations of western Van Diemen’s Land to leave their ancestral lands. Geographic analysis of Robinson journal of this remote area provides unique insights in the changes in fire regimes that followed this tragic ...
David M J S Bowman +3 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Historic rice‐field watersheds in Georgetown County, South Carolina, experience climate‐driven hydrologic changes threatening waterfowl habitat. The reproducible GIS–Python workflow combines HUC‐scale delineation with ArcGIS Pro processing and MACA‐v2 downscaled climate analysis through grouped cross‐validation to measure and explain stream ...
Oluwatobi E. Olaniyi +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Random encounter modelling as a viable method to estimate absolute abundance of reef fish
Abstract Remote underwater video (RUV) surveys are increasingly replacing diver‐based underwater visual censuses (UVCs) in fish ecology studies, especially on coral reefs. However, extracting reliable estimates of abundance or density from video footage is a major challenge, with most studies using a metric of relative abundance, MaxN (maximum number ...
Cher F. Y. Chow +7 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract As biocultural approaches to conservation gain traction (e.g., through international commitments to Indigenous Peoples and local communities) and external conservation actors increasingly seek to engage with on‐the‐ground holders of biocultural diversity, improved understanding is needed of what biocultural diversity means.
Natalie D. L. York
wiley +1 more source
A 20-year retrospective cohort study of TB infection among the Hill-tribe HIV/AIDS populations, Thailand. [PDF]
Apidechkul T.
europepmc +1 more source
Differential Infection and Colonisation of Needle Age Classes by Cronartium ribicola
ABSTRACT White pine blister rust (WPBR) is a disease on North American five‐needle white pine trees caused by the non‐native fungal pathogen Cronartium ribicola that is causing widespread decline and mortality of Pinus flexilis (limber pine) in high elevation western forests.
Ashley E. Miller +4 more
wiley +1 more source

