Browsing Brage INN by Author "Corradini, Andrea"
Now showing items 1-3 of 3
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Predicting kill sites of an apex predator from GPS data in different multi-prey systems
Oliveira, Teresa; Sanchez, David Carricondo; Mattisson, Jenny; Vogt, Kristina; Corradini, Andrea; Linnell, John Durrus; Odden, John; Heurich, Marco Dietmar; Rodríguez-Recio, Mariano; Krofel, Miha (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022)Kill rates are a central parameter to assess the impact of predation on prey species. An accurate estimation of kill rates requires a correct identification of kill sites, often achieved by field-checking GPS location ... -
Roads constrain movement across behavioural processes in a partially migratory ungulate
Passoni, Gioele; Coulson, Tim; Ranc, Nathan; Corradini, Andrea; Hewison, A. J. Mark; Ciuti, Simone; Gehr, Benedikt; Heurich, Marco; Brieger, Falko; Sandfort, Robin; Mysterud, Atle; Balkenhol, Niko; Cagnacci, Francesca (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2021)Background: Human disturbance alters animal movement globally and infrastructure, such as roads, can act as physical barriers that impact behavior across multiple spatial scales. In ungulates, roads can particularly hamper ... -
Wherever I may roam—Human activity alters movements of red deer (Cervus elaphus) and elk (Cervus canadensis) across two continents
Mumme, Steffen; Middleton, Arthur D.; Ciucci, Paolo; De Groeve, Johannes; Corradini, Andrea; Aikens, Ellen O.; Ossi, Federico; Atwood, Paul; Balkenhol, Niko; Cole, Eric K.; Debeffe, Lucie; Dewey, Sarah R.; Fischer, Claude; Gude, Justin; Heurich, Marco Dietmar; Hurley, Mark A.; Jarnemo, Anders; Kauffman, Matthew J.; Licoppe, Alain; van Loon, Emiel; McWhirter, Doug; Mong, Tony W.; Pedrotti, Luca; Morellet, Nicolas; Mysterud, Atle; Peters, Wibke Erika Brigitta; Proffitt, Kelly; Saïd, Sonia; Signer, Johannes; Sunde, Peter; Starý, Martin; Cagnacci, Francesca (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2023)Human activity and associated landscape modifications alter the movements of ani-mals with consequences for populations and ecosystems worldwide. Species perform-ing long-distance movements are thought to be particularly ...