Registro completo |
Provedor de dados: |
Ecology and Society
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País: |
Canada
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Título: |
A conceptual framework to evaluate human-wildlife interactions within coupled human and natural systems
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Autores: |
Morzillo, Anita T.; University of Connecticut; anita.morzillo@uconn.edu
de Beurs, Kirsten M.; University of Oklahoma; kdebeurs@ou.edu
Martin-Mikle, Chelsea J.; University of Oklahoma; chelseajane.martin@gmail.com
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Data: |
2014-09-15
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Ano: |
2014
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Palavras-chave: |
Coupled human and natural systems
Human-wildlife conflict
Human-wildlife interactions
Landscape ecology
Pesticides
Rodenticides
Wildlife management
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Resumo: |
Landscape characteristics affect human-wildlife interactions. However, there is a need to better understand mechanisms that drive those interactions, particularly feedbacks that exist between wildlife-related impacts, human reaction to and behavior as a result of those impacts, and how land use and landscape characteristics may influence those components within coupled human and natural systems. Current conceptual models of human-wildlife interactions often focus on species population size as the independent variable driving those interactions. Such an approach potentially overlooks important feedbacks among and drivers of human-wildlife interactions that result from mere wildlife presence versus absence. We describe an emerging conceptual framework that focuses on wildlife as a driver of human behavior and allows us to better understand linkages between humans, wildlife, and the broader landscape. We also present results of a pilot analysis related to our own ongoing study of urban rodent control behavior to illustrate one application of this framework within a study of urban landscapes.
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Tipo: |
Peer-Reviewed Reports
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Idioma: |
Inglês
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Identificador: |
vol19/iss3/art44/
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Editor: |
Resilience Alliance
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Formato: |
text/html application/pdf
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Fonte: |
Ecology and Society; Vol. 19, No. 3 (2014)
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