The wide-ranging, cumulative, negative effects of anthropogenic disturbance, including habitat degradation, exotic species, and hunting, on native wildlife has been well documented across a range of habitats worldwide with carnivores potentially being the most vulnerable due to their more extinction prone characteristics. Investigating the effects of anthropogenic pressures on sympatric carnivores is needed to improve our ability to develop targeted, effective management plans for carnivore conservation worldwide. Utilizing photographic, line-transect, and habitat sampling, as well as landscape analyses and village-based bushmeat hunting surveys, we provide the first investigation of how multiple forms of habitat degradation (fragmentation,...
Fosas (Cryptoprocta ferox) are Madagascar’s largest carnivores, occupying much of the island’s fores...
1. Demography and conservation status of many wild organisms are increasingly shaped by interactions...
The world's largest carnivores are declining and now occupy mere fractions of their historical range...
The wide-ranging, cumulative, negative effects of anthropogenic disturbance, including habitat degra...
The wide-ranging, cumulative, negative effects of anthropogenic disturbance, including habitat degra...
Large carnivores are in global decline, chiefly resultant of anthropogenic persecution, habitat redu...
Anthropogenic habitat alteration and invasive species are threatening carnivores globally. Understan...
Madagascar is a nation praised for its floral and faunal endemism and biodiversity. Among the island...
Madagascar is an island nation renowned for its biodiversity and species endemism, yet it is still l...
© 2020 Fauna & Flora International. The Vulnerable fosa Cryptoprocta ferox is the largest native car...
Many carnivores inhabit human-dominated landscapes outside protected reserves. Spatially explicit as...
Recently expanded estimates for when humans arrived on Madagascar (up to ~10,000 years ago) highligh...
Mesocarnivores constitute a diverse and often abundant group of species, which are increasingly occu...
Fosas (Cryptoprocta ferox) are Madagascar’s largest carnivores, occupying much of the island&r...
Scavenging by large carnivores is integral for ecosystem functioning by limiting the build-up of car...
Fosas (Cryptoprocta ferox) are Madagascar’s largest carnivores, occupying much of the island’s fores...
1. Demography and conservation status of many wild organisms are increasingly shaped by interactions...
The world's largest carnivores are declining and now occupy mere fractions of their historical range...
The wide-ranging, cumulative, negative effects of anthropogenic disturbance, including habitat degra...
The wide-ranging, cumulative, negative effects of anthropogenic disturbance, including habitat degra...
Large carnivores are in global decline, chiefly resultant of anthropogenic persecution, habitat redu...
Anthropogenic habitat alteration and invasive species are threatening carnivores globally. Understan...
Madagascar is a nation praised for its floral and faunal endemism and biodiversity. Among the island...
Madagascar is an island nation renowned for its biodiversity and species endemism, yet it is still l...
© 2020 Fauna & Flora International. The Vulnerable fosa Cryptoprocta ferox is the largest native car...
Many carnivores inhabit human-dominated landscapes outside protected reserves. Spatially explicit as...
Recently expanded estimates for when humans arrived on Madagascar (up to ~10,000 years ago) highligh...
Mesocarnivores constitute a diverse and often abundant group of species, which are increasingly occu...
Fosas (Cryptoprocta ferox) are Madagascar’s largest carnivores, occupying much of the island&r...
Scavenging by large carnivores is integral for ecosystem functioning by limiting the build-up of car...
Fosas (Cryptoprocta ferox) are Madagascar’s largest carnivores, occupying much of the island’s fores...
1. Demography and conservation status of many wild organisms are increasingly shaped by interactions...
The world's largest carnivores are declining and now occupy mere fractions of their historical range...