SC
Publications
- Vision statement for the planet in 2050
- Vision Statement for the Planet in 2050
- Restoring degraded land: contributing to Aichi Targets 14, 15, and beyond
- Human–wildlife coexistence in science and practice
- Integrated framework for stakeholder participation: Methods and tools for identifying and addressing human–wildlife conflicts
- Assessing the suitability of diversity metrics to detect biodiversity change
- Mapping opportunities and challenges for rewilding in Europe
- European wilderness in a time of farmland abandonment
- Governing trade‐offs in ecosystem services and disservices to achieve human–wildlife coexistence
- Harmonizing Biodiversity Conservation and Productivity in the Context of Increasing Demands on Landscapes
- Conservation Planning for Biodiversity and Wilderness: A Real-World Example
- High impact journals in ecology cover proportionally more statistically significant findings
- Incorporating threat in hotspots and coldspots of biodiversity and ecosystem services
- Rewilding complex ecosystems
- Conventional land-use intensification reduces species richness and increases production
- Biome type and availability of natural vegetation dictate whether farmland intensification or expansion is worse for biodiversity
- Key tropical crops at risk from pollinator loss due to climate change and land use
- Geography and availability of natural habitat determine whether cropland intensification or expansion is more detrimental to biodiversity
Usage metrics
Co-workers & collaborators
- TN
Tim Newbold
- DL
David Leclère
- HP
Henrique M. Pereira
- LB
Luís Borda-de-Água
- TM
Thomas Merckx
- ES
Esther Sossai