As anthropogenic activities continue to impact ecosystems around the world, the ability to monitor and manage ecosystem health and function increases in importance. Despite this need for monitoring, management projects are often limited by the funding, time and personnel required to gather field data. These costs only increase when considering large dynamic ecosystems, such as pulsed wetlands, that have spatially and temporally variable habitat conditions, thus requiring frequent field measurements across the landscape. The ability to use sensory data can drastically reduce the resources required to monitor field conditions, but can limit the scope and resolution at which data can be measured. Using the Florida Everglades as a model system...
Animals living in patchy environments may depend on resource pulses to meet the high energetic deman...
To determine how habitat structural complexity, which affects prey vulnerability, influences foragin...
Hydrological variation is believed to be the main density-independent factor that controls fish recr...
Meeting Everglades restoration goals will require tradeoffs, such as restoring historical hydrology ...
In large-scale conservation decisions, scenario planning identifies key uncertainties of ecosystem f...
Hydroscape structure can play a critical role in animal behavior, abundance, and community structure...
Anthropogenic habitat alterations and water-management practices have imposed an artificial spatial ...
The Florida Everglades presents a model setting for studying animal-habitat relationships in a dynam...
Understanding wetland responses to human perturbations is essential to the effective management of F...
A major goal of the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP) is to recover historical (pre-d...
Spatial ecology and movement strategies of aquatic organisms may limit their response to human-cause...
The Everglades in southern Florida, U.S.A., is a major focus of conservation activities. The freshwa...
1. Long-term monitoring requires repeated visits to a study site, greatly increasing the potential f...
Animals living in patchy environments may depend on resource pulses to meet the high energetic deman...
Background/Question/Methods Movement by animals can have major influence on metapopulations and meta...
Animals living in patchy environments may depend on resource pulses to meet the high energetic deman...
To determine how habitat structural complexity, which affects prey vulnerability, influences foragin...
Hydrological variation is believed to be the main density-independent factor that controls fish recr...
Meeting Everglades restoration goals will require tradeoffs, such as restoring historical hydrology ...
In large-scale conservation decisions, scenario planning identifies key uncertainties of ecosystem f...
Hydroscape structure can play a critical role in animal behavior, abundance, and community structure...
Anthropogenic habitat alterations and water-management practices have imposed an artificial spatial ...
The Florida Everglades presents a model setting for studying animal-habitat relationships in a dynam...
Understanding wetland responses to human perturbations is essential to the effective management of F...
A major goal of the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP) is to recover historical (pre-d...
Spatial ecology and movement strategies of aquatic organisms may limit their response to human-cause...
The Everglades in southern Florida, U.S.A., is a major focus of conservation activities. The freshwa...
1. Long-term monitoring requires repeated visits to a study site, greatly increasing the potential f...
Animals living in patchy environments may depend on resource pulses to meet the high energetic deman...
Background/Question/Methods Movement by animals can have major influence on metapopulations and meta...
Animals living in patchy environments may depend on resource pulses to meet the high energetic deman...
To determine how habitat structural complexity, which affects prey vulnerability, influences foragin...
Hydrological variation is believed to be the main density-independent factor that controls fish recr...