Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
1
Published in 2019 at "Human Dimensions of Wildlife"
DOI: 10.1080/10871209.2019.1650402
Abstract: ABSTRACT A Delphi exercise involving 17 senior national parks’ biologists in the United States of America and Canada examined how evolving concepts of wildlife health resonated with Parks’ needs. Participants examined wildlife health as a…
read more here.
Keywords:
perspectives wildlife;
national parks;
health;
parks concurrence ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
1
Published in 2021 at "Conservation Biology"
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13724
Abstract: Wildlife health assessments help identify populations at risk of starvation, disease, and decline from anthropogenic impacts on natural habitats. We conducted an overview of available health assessment studies in noncaptive vertebrates and devised a framework…
read more here.
Keywords:
wildlife health;
importance health;
health;
assessments conservation ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
2
Published in 2023 at "Environmental Reviews"
DOI: 10.1139/er-2022-0087
Abstract: Western-trained, non-Indigenous researchers in Canada have an ethical responsibility to collaborate with Indigenous Peoples and to re-envision the scientific research process through the lens of reconciliation. The health of the natural environment has long been…
read more here.
Keywords:
ways knowing;
health;
non indigenous;
research ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
1
Published in 2022 at "Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine"
DOI: 10.1638/2021-0114
Abstract: Abstract: The management of wildlife in the United States and Canada, including the monitoring and maintenance of the health of wildlife populations and the ecosystems on which they depend, are conducted under a set of…
read more here.
Keywords:
health;
conservation;
north american;
model ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
1
Published in 2018 at "Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution"
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2018.00127
Abstract: This paper introduces the concept of harm-reduction based health intelligence as the next step in the evolution of urban wildlife surveillance. There are three reasons to evolve urban wildlife health surveillance: (1) proactive steps to…
read more here.
Keywords:
intelligence;
surveillance;
urban wildlife;
health ... See more keywords