Publications
NIBIOs employees contribute to several hundred scientific articles and research reports every year. You can browse or search in our collection which contains references and links to these publications as well as other research and dissemination activities. The collection is continously updated with new and historical material.
2021
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Karin Juul HesselsøeAbstract
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Karin Juul HesselsøeAbstract
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Michal Sposob Radziah WahidAbstract
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Authors
Matthew J. Kauffman Francesca Cagnacci Simon Chamaillé-Jammes Mark Hebblewhite J. Grant C. Hopcraft Jerod A. Merkle Thomas Mueller Atle Mysterud Wibke Erika Brigitta Peters Christiane Roettger Alethea Steingisser James E. Meacham Kasahun Abera Jan Adamczewski Ellen O. Aikens Hattie Bartlam-Brooks Emily Bennitt Joel Berger Charlotte Boyd Steeve D. Côté Lucie Isabelle Debeffe Andrea S. Dekrout Nandintsetseg Dejid Emiliano Donadio Luthando Dziba William F. Fagan Claude Fischer Stefano Focardi John M. Fryxell Richard W. S. Fynn Chris Geremia Benito A. González Anne Gunn Elie Gurarie Marco Dietmar Heurich Jodi Hilty Mark A. Hurley Aran Johnson Kyle Joly Petra Kaczensky Corinne J. Kendall Pavel Kochkarev Leonid Kolpaschikov Rafal Kowalczyk Frank van Langevelde Binbin V. Li Anne Loison Alex L. Lobora Tinaapi H. Madiri David Mallon Erling Meisingset Christer Moe Rolandsen Erling Johan Solberg Olav StrandAbstract
Migration of ungulates (hooved mammals) is a fundamental ecological process that promotes abundant herds, whose effects cascade up and down terrestrial food webs. Migratory ungulates provide the prey base that maintains large carnivore and scavenger populations and underpins terrestrial biodiversity (fig. S1). When ungulates move in large aggregations, their hooves, feces, and urine create conditions that facilitate distinct biotic communities. The migrations of ungulates have sustained humans for thousands of years, forming tight cultural links among Indigenous people and local communities. Yet ungulate migrations are disappearing at an alarming rate (1). Efforts by wildlife managers and conservationists are thwarted by a singular challenge: Most ungulate migrations have never been mapped in sufficient detail to guide effective conservation. Without a strategic and collaborative effort, many of the world’s great migrations will continue to be truncated, severed, or lost in the coming decades. Fortunately, a combination of animal tracking datasets, historical records, and local and Indigenous knowledge can form the basis for a global atlas of migrations, designed to support conservation action and policy at local, national, and international levels.
Authors
Jørgen A.B. Mølmann Sigridur Dalmannsdottir Anne Linn Hykkerud Timo Hytönen Amos Samkumar Laura JaakolaAbstract
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Habtamu AlemAbstract
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