Anthropocene defaunation is the global phenomenon of human-induced animal biodiversity loss. Understanding the patterns and process of defaunation is critical to predict outcomes for wildlife populations and cascading consequences for ecosystem function and human welfare. We investigated a defaunation gradient in northeastern Gabon by establishing 24 transects at varying distances (2–30 km) to rural villages and surveying the abundance and composition of vertebrate communities. Distance from village was positively correlated with observations of hunting (shotgun shells, campfires, hunters), making it a good proxy for hunting pressure. Species diversity declined significantly with proximity to village, with mammal richness increasing by ro...
Tropical forests are increasingly degraded by industrial logging, urbanization, agriculture, and inf...
Many species of large wildlife have declined drastically worldwide. These reductions often lead to p...
1. Demography and conservation status of many wild organisms are increasingly shaped by interactions...
Anthropocene defaunation is the global phenomenon of human-induced animal biodiversity loss. Underst...
1.Anthropocene defaunation is the global phenomenon of human-induced animal biodiversity loss. Under...
1.Anthropocene defaunation is the global phenomenon of human-induced animal biodiversity loss. Under...
Gabon holds some of the world’s richest, most species-diverse tropical rainforest. Over 80% of the c...
Hunting may be the greatest threat to wildlife populations across the Congo basin. Large-bodied spec...
As local and global disturbances reshape African savannas, an understanding of how animal communitie...
Areas allocated for industrial logging and community-owned forests account for over 50% of all remai...
Human activity in African tropical rainforests continues to threaten wild mammals. Many rural commun...
In Central Africa, wildlife populations are increasingly influenced by humans, even in protected are...
To assess ecological consequences of bushmeat hunting in African lowland rainforests, we compared pa...
The wide-ranging, cumulative, negative effects of anthropogenic disturbance, including habitat degra...
Emerging conservation paradigms have shifted from single to multi-species approaches focused on sust...
Tropical forests are increasingly degraded by industrial logging, urbanization, agriculture, and inf...
Many species of large wildlife have declined drastically worldwide. These reductions often lead to p...
1. Demography and conservation status of many wild organisms are increasingly shaped by interactions...
Anthropocene defaunation is the global phenomenon of human-induced animal biodiversity loss. Underst...
1.Anthropocene defaunation is the global phenomenon of human-induced animal biodiversity loss. Under...
1.Anthropocene defaunation is the global phenomenon of human-induced animal biodiversity loss. Under...
Gabon holds some of the world’s richest, most species-diverse tropical rainforest. Over 80% of the c...
Hunting may be the greatest threat to wildlife populations across the Congo basin. Large-bodied spec...
As local and global disturbances reshape African savannas, an understanding of how animal communitie...
Areas allocated for industrial logging and community-owned forests account for over 50% of all remai...
Human activity in African tropical rainforests continues to threaten wild mammals. Many rural commun...
In Central Africa, wildlife populations are increasingly influenced by humans, even in protected are...
To assess ecological consequences of bushmeat hunting in African lowland rainforests, we compared pa...
The wide-ranging, cumulative, negative effects of anthropogenic disturbance, including habitat degra...
Emerging conservation paradigms have shifted from single to multi-species approaches focused on sust...
Tropical forests are increasingly degraded by industrial logging, urbanization, agriculture, and inf...
Many species of large wildlife have declined drastically worldwide. These reductions often lead to p...
1. Demography and conservation status of many wild organisms are increasingly shaped by interactions...