Graeme Shannon
Wildlife ecologist based in Trondheim, Norway.
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- Biologging provides crucial data, but our study of European shags shows that logger type, placement and duration can alter behaviour, reduce body mass and chick growth, and affect survival, highlighting key welfare and data-quality concerns. tinyurl.com/u7vbv2xk @ninanatureresearch.bsky.social
- Camera-traps work best for surveying wildlife when site-level covariates are considered. Owain Barton led our study showing more cameras reduce error, longer deployments help only if occupancy varies, & ignoring key covariates can skews results zslpublications.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
- Reposted by Graeme ShannonVery happy to share that our paper presenting a framework for optimal movement decisions in complex landscapes has just been published in TREE @stephharris.bsky.social @jacobnabe.bsky.social tinyurl.com/d45s36y5
- Reposted by Graeme Shannon💡 We are writing a systematic review article about physical properties of light and attractiveness to seabirds in the Norwegian Arctic and are in need for some benchmark literature to evaluate our systematic search! Can anyone help? Please share 💡
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- Research exploring exploring how the loss of key individuals affects elephant societies. www.port.ac.uk/news-events-...
- Researchers push to include animal cultures in conservation policy | Science | AAAS www.science.org/content/arti...
- ‘Uniquely human’ language capacity found in bonobos | Science | AAAS www.science.org/content/arti...
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- New research led by @science-action.bsky.social and team exploring the daily activity patterns of animals using camera trap data from across the globe. www.popsci.com/environment/...
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- Reposted by Graeme ShannonA study of deer poo in North Wales could shed light on the conservation of woodlands in the UK.
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