International audienceUnderstanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is important for the sustainable management of protected areas and wildlife conservation. We investigated the drivers of domestic and wild herbivore habitat selection at the edge of an unfenced protected area adjacent to Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe. We used GPS data to quantify the movement patterns of elephant bulls, buffalo and cattle at multiple scales and according to seasonal changes of surface water availability. Cattle, elephant and buffalo prefer open grassland habitats found close to water but elephant and buffalo avoid cattle differently. During the rainy season, cattle enter the protected area daily; buffalo avoid cattle completely at ...
Traditional rangelands in many developing countries are currently being encroached by cultivation, d...
Traditional rangelands in many developing countries are currently being encroached by cultivation, d...
Animals may anticipate and try to avoid, at some costs, physical encounters with other competitors. ...
International audienceUnderstanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is impo...
International audienceUnderstanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is impo...
International audienceUnderstanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is impo...
International audienceUnderstanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is impo...
Understanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is important for the sustaina...
International audienceUnderstanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is impo...
Understanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is important for the sustaina...
Understanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human‐wildlife interfaces is important for the sustaina...
Understanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human‐wildlife interfaces is important for the sustaina...
The rapid expansion of human populations in East Africa increases human-wildlife interactions, parti...
An understanding of the habitat selection patterns by wild herbivores is critical for adaptive manag...
The rapid expansion of human populations in East Africa increases human-wildlife interactions, parti...
Traditional rangelands in many developing countries are currently being encroached by cultivation, d...
Traditional rangelands in many developing countries are currently being encroached by cultivation, d...
Animals may anticipate and try to avoid, at some costs, physical encounters with other competitors. ...
International audienceUnderstanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is impo...
International audienceUnderstanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is impo...
International audienceUnderstanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is impo...
International audienceUnderstanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is impo...
Understanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is important for the sustaina...
International audienceUnderstanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is impo...
Understanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human-wildlife interfaces is important for the sustaina...
Understanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human‐wildlife interfaces is important for the sustaina...
Understanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of human‐wildlife interfaces is important for the sustaina...
The rapid expansion of human populations in East Africa increases human-wildlife interactions, parti...
An understanding of the habitat selection patterns by wild herbivores is critical for adaptive manag...
The rapid expansion of human populations in East Africa increases human-wildlife interactions, parti...
Traditional rangelands in many developing countries are currently being encroached by cultivation, d...
Traditional rangelands in many developing countries are currently being encroached by cultivation, d...
Animals may anticipate and try to avoid, at some costs, physical encounters with other competitors. ...