Saving the world's terrestrial megafauna

From the late Pleistocene to the Holocene and now the so-called Anthropocene, humans have been driving an ongoing series of species declines and extinctions (Dirzo et al. 2014). Large-bodied mammals are typically at a higher risk of extinction than smaller ones (Cardillo et al. 2005). However, in so...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ripple, W, Chapron, G, Lopez-Bao, J, Durant, S, Macdonald, D, Lindsey, P, Bennett, E, Beschta, R, Bruskotter, J, Campos-Arceiz, A, Corlett, R, Darimont, C, Dickman, A, Dirzo, R, Dublin, H, Estes, J, Everatt, K, Galetti, M, Goswami, V, Hayward, M, Hedges, S, Hoffmann, M, Hunter, L, Kerley, G, Letnic, M, Levi, T, Maisels, F, Morrison, J, Nelson, M, Newsome, T, Painter, L, Pringle, R, Sandom, C, Terborgh, J, Treves, A, van Valkenburgh, B, Vucetich, J, Wirsing, A, Wallach, A, Wolf, C, Woodroffe, R, Young, H, Zhang, L
Format: Journal article
Published: American Institute of Biological Sciences 2016