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Papers by Carol Chambers

Research paper thumbnail of Artificial roosts for tree-roosting bats in northern Arizona

Wildlife Society Bulletin, 2012

Research paper thumbnail of Wildlife and Anthropogenic Changes in the Arid Southwest

Conservation and Sustainable Development, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Thinking outside the box: A review of artificial roosts for bats

Wildlife Society Bulletin, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of The effect of non-native forestry on landscape connectivity for wildlife in Nicaragua

ABSTRACT Background/Question/Methods Non-native plantation monocultures, like early successional ... more ABSTRACT Background/Question/Methods Non-native plantation monocultures, like early successional forest, could provide services such as carbon sequestration to meet international targets. However, one of the primary venues for developing plantations is tropical dry forest, which is already threatened by severe fragmentation. These forests and dependent wildlife populations could be better protected if the landscape context is considered prior to plantation development. In this analysis, we ask whether teak (Tecona grandis) plantations in Nicaragua could act as a barrier to animal migration and gene flow. We used least-cost path and circuit-based connectivity measures to predict the effect of plantation configuration on forest-dependent species, targeting the endangered Central American spider monkey (Ateles geoffroyi). Circuit-theoretic methods measure flow across multiple potential pathways, providing an additional measure of redundancy compared to a least-cost path. To deduce the effect of plantation configuration, we compared landscape connectivity prior to plantation development to a series of post-development scenarios. Results/Conclusions Our results strongly suggest that connectivity will be lost between critical forest stands following the current plantation operations. The effective distance or resistance between specific populations increased as plantation areas were converted to a non-forest matrix (least cost path 31% increase, circuit resistance 81% increase). In addition, new plantations will be developed in 2011 within the single largest continuous forest stand and will potentially bisect animal populations, increasing travel resistance within the stand by a factor of 10 (circuit resistance distance: 4.4 to 47 ohms).This scenario could have been avoided if the landscape had been evaluated prior to plantation development, even using available land cover information. We conclude that non-native reforestation for carbon sequestration can be better balanced with native biodiversity conservation if landscape context is incorporated into planning and certification.

Research paper thumbnail of Response of small mammal and amphibian capture rates to clearcutting, burning, and glyphosate application in the Oregon Coast Range

Research paper thumbnail of Long-term Silvicultural Research Sites: Promoting the Concept--Protecting the Investment-Section 2: Recently established long term silvicultural research sites-CFIRP: What we learned the first

Foresters have long understood the need for long term studies of the response of forested ecosyst... more Foresters have long understood the need for long term studies of the response of forested ecosystems to forest management practices and our literature is peppered with references to such studies. When rotations are planned to exceed a human lifetime, it is generally ...

Research paper thumbnail of Fate of the survivors of the 1995 and 1996 Arizona trucking migrations of costume-reared greater sandhill cranes

Research paper thumbnail of A comparison of behavior for two cohorts of captive-reared greater sandhill cranes released in northern Arizona

Research paper thumbnail of Nongame Species

Research paper thumbnail of Wildlife Responses

Research paper thumbnail of PS 54-59: The effect of non-native forestry on landscape connectivity for wildlife in Nicaragua

Research paper thumbnail of A reintroduction experiment involving mated pairs of parent-reared greater sandhill cranes in northern Arizona

Research paper thumbnail of The use of wildlife water developments by migratory songbirds in southwestern Arizona

Research paper thumbnail of Roosts and home ranges of spotted bats (Euderma maculatum) in northern Arizona

Research paper thumbnail of Stand management alternatives for multiple resources: integrated management experiments

Research paper thumbnail of College of Forestry Integrated Research Project: ecological and socioeconomic responses to alternative silvicultural treatments

Research paper thumbnail of Montane ecosystems used as rangelands

Research paper thumbnail of Vertebrates

Research paper thumbnail of Small mammal and amphibian communities and habitat associations in red alder stands, central Oregon Coast Range

Research paper thumbnail of II. 1999. Breeding bird responses to three silvicultural treatments in the Oregon Coast Range

Research paper thumbnail of Artificial roosts for tree-roosting bats in northern Arizona

Wildlife Society Bulletin, 2012

Research paper thumbnail of Wildlife and Anthropogenic Changes in the Arid Southwest

Conservation and Sustainable Development, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Thinking outside the box: A review of artificial roosts for bats

Wildlife Society Bulletin, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of The effect of non-native forestry on landscape connectivity for wildlife in Nicaragua

ABSTRACT Background/Question/Methods Non-native plantation monocultures, like early successional ... more ABSTRACT Background/Question/Methods Non-native plantation monocultures, like early successional forest, could provide services such as carbon sequestration to meet international targets. However, one of the primary venues for developing plantations is tropical dry forest, which is already threatened by severe fragmentation. These forests and dependent wildlife populations could be better protected if the landscape context is considered prior to plantation development. In this analysis, we ask whether teak (Tecona grandis) plantations in Nicaragua could act as a barrier to animal migration and gene flow. We used least-cost path and circuit-based connectivity measures to predict the effect of plantation configuration on forest-dependent species, targeting the endangered Central American spider monkey (Ateles geoffroyi). Circuit-theoretic methods measure flow across multiple potential pathways, providing an additional measure of redundancy compared to a least-cost path. To deduce the effect of plantation configuration, we compared landscape connectivity prior to plantation development to a series of post-development scenarios. Results/Conclusions Our results strongly suggest that connectivity will be lost between critical forest stands following the current plantation operations. The effective distance or resistance between specific populations increased as plantation areas were converted to a non-forest matrix (least cost path 31% increase, circuit resistance 81% increase). In addition, new plantations will be developed in 2011 within the single largest continuous forest stand and will potentially bisect animal populations, increasing travel resistance within the stand by a factor of 10 (circuit resistance distance: 4.4 to 47 ohms).This scenario could have been avoided if the landscape had been evaluated prior to plantation development, even using available land cover information. We conclude that non-native reforestation for carbon sequestration can be better balanced with native biodiversity conservation if landscape context is incorporated into planning and certification.

Research paper thumbnail of Response of small mammal and amphibian capture rates to clearcutting, burning, and glyphosate application in the Oregon Coast Range

Research paper thumbnail of Long-term Silvicultural Research Sites: Promoting the Concept--Protecting the Investment-Section 2: Recently established long term silvicultural research sites-CFIRP: What we learned the first

Foresters have long understood the need for long term studies of the response of forested ecosyst... more Foresters have long understood the need for long term studies of the response of forested ecosystems to forest management practices and our literature is peppered with references to such studies. When rotations are planned to exceed a human lifetime, it is generally ...

Research paper thumbnail of Fate of the survivors of the 1995 and 1996 Arizona trucking migrations of costume-reared greater sandhill cranes

Research paper thumbnail of A comparison of behavior for two cohorts of captive-reared greater sandhill cranes released in northern Arizona

Research paper thumbnail of Nongame Species

Research paper thumbnail of Wildlife Responses

Research paper thumbnail of PS 54-59: The effect of non-native forestry on landscape connectivity for wildlife in Nicaragua

Research paper thumbnail of A reintroduction experiment involving mated pairs of parent-reared greater sandhill cranes in northern Arizona

Research paper thumbnail of The use of wildlife water developments by migratory songbirds in southwestern Arizona

Research paper thumbnail of Roosts and home ranges of spotted bats (Euderma maculatum) in northern Arizona

Research paper thumbnail of Stand management alternatives for multiple resources: integrated management experiments

Research paper thumbnail of College of Forestry Integrated Research Project: ecological and socioeconomic responses to alternative silvicultural treatments

Research paper thumbnail of Montane ecosystems used as rangelands

Research paper thumbnail of Vertebrates

Research paper thumbnail of Small mammal and amphibian communities and habitat associations in red alder stands, central Oregon Coast Range

Research paper thumbnail of II. 1999. Breeding bird responses to three silvicultural treatments in the Oregon Coast Range

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