Ana Nuno
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Conserving the Serengeti under uncertainty (Part II) or What can we learn from the Serengeti highway controversy?

31/1/2014

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Blog also posted at Imperial College Conservation Science and Stirling Conservation Science

Some time ago I blogged about my PhD research on managing social-ecological systems under uncertainty. I used the conservation of harvested ungulate species in the Serengeti, Tanzania, as a case study to investigate the importance of considering multiple types and sources of uncertainty when making conservation decisions. Far from being simply an interesting academic question, I’d argue that the need of acknowledging the social-ecological context and uncertainty in which conservation interventions take place has never been greater. Hear me out…

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Conserving the Serengeti under uncertainty (Part I)

5/1/2014

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Blog originally posted in November 2013 at Stirling Conservation Science

As conservationists, we endeavour providing increasingly better solutions for conservation issues, based on reliable information and robust understanding of the dynamics of the systems under consideration. However, despite our efforts in collecting data and learning about our study systems, increasing predictability and improving conservation implementation, conservation is both uncertain and dynamic. Uncertainty is very common in natural resource management and conservation; decisions may be affected by, for example, stochastic environmental variation, limited ability to observe wildlife and a lack of understanding about functional responses. So should we just give up and throw a coin when making decisions? On the contrary: we should investigate multiple types of uncertainty and their potential implications so that we can support better decisions. And that’s exactly what I did during my recently finished doctoral studies.


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How to better count animals in the Serengeti?

5/1/2014

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Blog originally posted in January 2013 at Imperial College Conservation Science 

The Serengeti is one of the most visited protected areas in the world. This ecosystem is particularly famous for the annual migration of around 1.8 million wildebeest, zebra and gazelles, making us wonder about a time when more wildlife could roam free across vast landscapes. But how do we know how many animals are there?

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