Jack Bamber
@jackantbam.bsky.social
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📥 172
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Ecology, PhD Candidate Univeristy of Aberdeen.
reposted by
Jack Bamber
Journal of Applied Ecology
about 1 month ago
Bridging the implementation gap: From predator control to non-lethal impact-based intervention🌏 Through a co-designed experiment with practitioner & community engagement, this study evaluated the effects of diversionary feeding as a non-lethal strategy to reduce predation🧪
doi.org/10.1111/1365...
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reposted by
Jack Bamber
about 1 month ago
Check out my BlueSky talk at
#BOUatEOU
on rewilding Excited to share my research at
#BOUatEOU
on breeding failure of tawny owls (Strix aluco) in commercial plantations 🦉🌲 How do owls deal with changing food availability and the return of a new nest predator?
#ornithology
#predation
#prey-switching
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Check out my bluesky talk for
#BOUatEOU
. We found that diversionary feeding is a suitable impact based tool to reduce conflicts between recovering predators (pine marten) and endangered ground nesting birds (cappercaillie) in Scottish Forests. 🧪🌍🦤🍁
about 1 month ago
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Check out these amazing wildlife images! One of the runners up was a picture from my cappercaillie monitoring! 📸
add a skeleton here at some point
about 1 month ago
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reposted by
Jack Bamber
Amber Cowans (she/her)
about 2 months ago
📝 Are you using multispecies occupancy models to investigate interactions in species occupancy (i.e. co-occurrence)? 🦁🦓 Check out our new paper for advice on the number of sites you need to reliably detect interactions under different scenarios ⬇️
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Sample size considerations for species co‐occurrence models
Multispecies occupancy models are widely applied to infer interactions in the occurrence of different species, but convergence and estimation issues under realistic sample sizes are common. We conduc...
https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.70175
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reposted by
Jack Bamber
Pablo Garcia-Diaz
about 2 months ago
Interestingly, I have noticed a reticence to consider options other than population control when managing invasive species. We wrote about it here
academic.oup.com/bioscience/a...
. 🌐
#bioinvasions
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New perspective out today in
@jappliedecology.bsky.social
. We reflect on co-producing evidence in an effort to bridge the implementation gap, for evidence based, impact focused predator control. What worked, what didn't and where barriers to implimentation still remain. You can't win them all... 🧪
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https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2664.70127
about 2 months ago
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reposted by
Jack Bamber
Chris Sutherland
3 months ago
My first
@uk.theconversation.com
article with
@jackantbam.bsky.social
and
@lambin-ecology.bsky.social
and
@kennyafc.bsky.social
"Surprisingly effective way to save the capercaillie: keep its predators well-fed"
theconversation.com/a-surprising...
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A surprisingly effective way to save the capercaillie: keep its predators well-fed – new research
Evidence suggests this alternative to culling the bird’s predators is effective.
https://theconversation.com/a-surprisingly-effective-way-to-save-the-capercaillie-keep-its-predators-well-fed-new-research-259925
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Check our
@theconversation.com
article, alongside
@chrissuthy.bsky.social
and
@lambin-ecology.bsky.social
(special mention to
@kennyafc.bsky.social
). Where we breakdown the entire diversionary feeding project!
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A surprisingly effective way to save the capercaillie: keep its predators well-fed – new research
Evidence suggests this alternative to culling the bird’s predators is effective.
https://theconversation.com/a-surprisingly-effective-way-to-save-the-capercaillie-keep-its-predators-well-fed-new-research-259925
3 months ago
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🚨 New publication 📝 Out today in the royal society proceedings B. We find that diversionary feeding boosts productivity of cappercaille from 0.82 to 1.90. Indicating that this impact based method can effectively reduce the influence of predation. Read all about it here:
shorturl.at/QRb76
3 months ago
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reposted by
Jack Bamber
Tilly S Scott
9 months ago
Check out Jack's new paper! Diversionary feeding of predators (in this case a Pine Martin) increases the breeding success of Capercaillie, as fewer eggs get stolen
#SciArt
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⏰New Research ⏰ We quantified the direct impact of diversionary feeding on capercaillie productivity. We show an increase in the proportion of hen with a brood in DF sites (37% -> 85%) and, as a result, a 131% increase in chicks per hen. Read more here:
www.researchgate.net/publication/...
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9 months ago
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