Results 271 to 280 of about 14,825 (288)
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Integrative Zoology, 2012
AbstractHuman–wildlife conflict (HWC) is a conservation concern that increasingly threatens the continued existence of some of the world's most endangered species. With an increase in human population, urban sprawl and subsequent encroachment on wild land, human and wildlife interaction has become inevitable.
Melissa, Pettigrew +6 more
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AbstractHuman–wildlife conflict (HWC) is a conservation concern that increasingly threatens the continued existence of some of the world's most endangered species. With an increase in human population, urban sprawl and subsequent encroachment on wild land, human and wildlife interaction has become inevitable.
Melissa, Pettigrew +6 more
openaire +2 more sources
Folia Primatologica, 2013
Human-wildlife conflict is a growing conservation threat, and is increasingly of importance to primate conservationists. Despite this, relatively little work has been done to date on the drivers of human-primate conflict, especially compared to other conflict-causing taxa such as large carnivores. However, the drivers of conflict are often very similar
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Human-wildlife conflict is a growing conservation threat, and is increasingly of importance to primate conservationists. Despite this, relatively little work has been done to date on the drivers of human-primate conflict, especially compared to other conflict-causing taxa such as large carnivores. However, the drivers of conflict are often very similar
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2019
The urban-wildland interface is growing as human development expands, potentially increasing human-wildlife conflict. Conflicts include animals accessing garbage, damaging agricultural crops, or depredating livestock. For mammalian carnivores this often leads to lethal mitigation.
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The urban-wildland interface is growing as human development expands, potentially increasing human-wildlife conflict. Conflicts include animals accessing garbage, damaging agricultural crops, or depredating livestock. For mammalian carnivores this often leads to lethal mitigation.
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Spatio-temporal patterns of human-carnivore conflict and mitigation in Pakistan
Journal for Nature Conservation, 2023Muhammad Danish +7 more
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Human-carnivore conflict mitigation on ranchlands in the western United States and eastern Colombia
Conflict between large carnivores and ranching livelihoods is a persistent challenge for carnivore conservation and management. Shifting societal views of large carnivore management at the end of the 20th century led to population recovery and, in some cases, reintroduction to their former range. Working lands, productive areas encompassing a matrix ofHyde, Matthew David +5 more
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An ecological framework for contextualizing carnivore–livestock conflict
Conservation Biology, 2020Christine E Wilkinson +2 more
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