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National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis

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1581-1590 of 6248
  1. Publication

    Offshore aquaculture: I know it when I see it

    Offshore aquaculture is increasingly viewed as a mechanism to meet growing protein demand for seafood, while minimizing adverse consequences on the environment and other uses in the oceans. However, despite growing interest in offshore aquaculture, there appears to be no consensus as to what measures commonly define an offshore site or how effects of offshore aquaculture—relative to more nearshore practices—are assessed.

  2. Publication

    Our path to better science in less time using open data science tools

    Reproducibility has long been a tenet of science but has been challenging to achieve—we learned this the hard way when our old approaches proved inadequate to efficiently reproduce our own work. Here we describe how several free software tools have fundamentally upgraded our approach to collaborative research, making our entire workflow more transparent and streamlined.

  3. Publication

    Spatio-temporal models reveal subtle changes to demersal communities following the Exxon Valdez oil spill

    Toxic pollutants such as crude oil have direct negative effects for a wide array of marine life. While mortality from acute exposure to oil is obvious, sub-lethal consequences of exposure to petroleum derivatives for growth and reproduction are less evident and sub-lethal effects in fish populations are obscured by natural environmental variation, fishing, and measurement error. We use fisheries independent surveys in the Gulf of Alaska to examine the consequences of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill (EVOS) for demersal fish.

  4. Publication

    Mechanisms and risk of cumulative impacts to coastal ecosystem services: An expert elicitation approach

    Coastal environments are some of the most populated on Earth, with greater pressures projected in the future. Managing coastal systems requires the consideration of multiple uses, which both benefit from and threaten multiple ecosystem services. Thus understanding the cumulative impacts of human activities on coastal ecosystem services would seem fundamental to management, yet there is no widely accepted approach for assessing these. This study trials an approach for understanding the cumulative impacts of anthropogenic change, focusing on Tasman and Golden Bays, New Zealand.

  5. Publication

    Mainstreaming investments in watershed services to enhance water security: Barriers and opportunities

    Watersheds are under increasing pressure worldwide, as expanding human activities coupled with global climate change threaten the water security of people downstream. In response, some communities have initiated investments in watershed services (IWS), a general term for policy-finance mechanisms that mitigate diverse watershed threats and promote ecosystem-based adaptation. Here, we explore the potential for increasing the uptake and impact of IWS, evaluating what limits its application and how institutional, financial, and informational barriers can be overcome.

  6. Publication

    Does the social equitability of community and incentive based conservation interventions in non-OECD countries, affect human well-being? A systematic review protocol

    An increasing number of conservation interventions aim to reduce their negative impacts on vulnerable people and to provide incentives aimed at improving overall human well-being. Community and incentive based conservation interventions have had variable rates of success in producing well-being outcomes, yet it is unclear why. Researchers have hypothesised that socially equitable conservation interventions will improve their likelihood of success.

  7. Publication

    Unconventional oil and gas spills: Materials, volumes, and risks to surface waters in four states of the U.S.

    Extraction of oil and gas from unconventional sources, such as shale, has dramatically increased over the past ten years, raising the potential for spills or releases of chemicals, waste materials, and oil and gas. We analyzed spill data associated with unconventional wells from Colorado, New Mexico, North Dakota and Pennsylvania from 2005 to 2014, where we defined unconventional wells as horizontally drilled into an unconventional formation. We identified materials spilled by state and for each material we summarized frequency, volumes and spill rates.

  8. Publication

    Summary of fire research consensus project phase 2 questionnaire responses

    The objectives of this work are to (a) determine the precise scope of issues to be tackled by the FRC Project, (b) complete an initial assessment of the scope and nature of divergent science-based perspectives relative to these issues, based on input from Steering Committee members and other informants. Also included are papers referenced by Phase 2 survey respondents in their answers to the Phase 2 survey.

  9. Publication

    Project charter: Fire research consensus project

    This document provides an overview of the Fire Research Consensus (FRC) Project, jointly funded by the Science for Nature and People Partnership (SNAPP) and the Wilburforce Foundation. The FRC Project brings together representatives from diverse geographic and scientific backgrounds to identify common ground related to the role of fire in pine, mixed conifer, and cold subalpine forests across the western US, so as to inform public policy and management decision-making.

  10. Publication

    Does climate variability influence the demography of wild primates? Evidence from long-term life-history data in seven species

    Earth's rapidly changing climate creates a growing need to understand how demographic processes in natural populations are affected by climate variability, particularly among organisms threatened by extinction. Long-term, large-scale, and cross-taxon studies of vital rate variation in relation to climate variability can be particularly valuable because they can reveal environmental drivers that affect multiple species over extensive regions. Few such data exist for animals with slow life histories, particularly in the tropics, where climate variation over large-scale space is asynchronous.