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Feature Article

susan's picture

Durban maps path to climate treaty

7377

Marathon talks enable Europe to break deadlock over global-warming deal with major greenhouse-gas emitters.

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Publication Date: 
15/12/2011
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susan's picture

Watching the players at the climate poker table

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In two decades of covering climate-change negotiations, Frank McDonald, has seen youthful hope fight dark forces, and a distant threat become a reality.

293
480
Publication Date: 
15/12/2011
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susan's picture

The mask slips

The Durban meeting shows that climate policy and climate science inhabit parallel worlds. (Editorial)

7377
Publication Date: 
15/12/2011
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sheeja's picture

Forests for people

susan's picture

Analysis of patterns of bushmeat consumption reveals extensive exploitation of protected species in Eastern Madagascar

12
1-12
Publication Date: 
14/12/2011

Understanding the patterns of wild meat consumption from tropical forests is important for designing approaches to address this major threat to biodiversity and mitigate potential pathways for transmission of emerging diseases. Bushmeat consumption has been particularly poorly studied in Madagascar, one of the world's hottest biodiversity hotspots. Studying bushmeat consumption is challenging as many species are protected and researchers must consider the incentives faced by informants.

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susan's picture

Wildlife strike risk assessment in several Italian airports: Lessons from BRI and a new methodology implementation

12
1-6
Publication Date: 
14/12/2011

The presence of wildlife in airport areas poses substantial hazards to aviation. Wildlife aircraft collisions (hereafter wildlife strikes) cause losses in terms of human lives and direct monetary losses for the aviation industry. In recent years, wildlife strikes have increased in parallel with air traffic increase and species habituation to anthropic areas. In this paper, we used an ecological approach to wildlife strike risk assessment to eight Italian international airports.

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susan's picture

Predicting incursion of plant invaders into Kruger National Park, South Africa: The interplay of general drivers and species-specific factors

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1-12
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14/12/2011

Overcoming boundaries is crucial for incursion of alien plant species and their successful naturalization and invasion within protected areas. Previous work showed that in Kruger National Park, South Africa, this process can be quantified and that factors determining the incursion of invasive species can be identified and predicted confidently. Here we explore the similarity between determinants of incursions identified by the general model based on a multispecies assemblage, and those identified by species-specific models.

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susan's picture

Global food demand and the sustainable intensification of agriculture

50
20260–20264
Publication Date: 
13/12/2011

Global food demand is increasing rapidly, as are the environmental impacts of agricultural expansion. Here, we project global demand for crop production in 2050 and evaluate the environmental impacts of alternative ways that this demand might be met. We find that per capita demand for crops, when measured as caloric or protein content of all crops combined, has been a similarly increasing function of per capita real income since 1960. This relationship forecasts a 100–110% increase in global crop demand from 2005 to 2050.

108
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susan's picture

Environmental prediction, risk assessment and extreme events: adaptation strategies for the developing world

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4768-4797
Publication Date: 
13/12/2011

The uncertainty associated with predicting extreme weather events has serious implications for the developing world, owing to the greater societal vulnerability to such events. Continual exposure to unanticipated extreme events is a contributing factor for the descent into perpetual and structural rural poverty. We provide two examples of how probabilistic environmental prediction of extreme weather events can support dynamic adaptation. In the current climate era, we describe how short-term flood forecasts have been developed and implemented in Bangladesh.

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susan's picture

Toward an open-access global database for mapping, control, and surveillance of neglected tropical diseases

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1-11
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13/12/2011

There is growing interest in the scientific community, health ministries, and other organizations to control and eventually eliminate neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). Control efforts require reliable maps of NTD distribution estimated from appropriate models and survey data on the number of infected people among those examined at a given location. This kind of data is often available in the literature as part of epidemiological studies. However, an open-access database compiling location-specific survey data does not yet exist.

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