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Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
54
Citations
13302
World Ranking
3092
National Ranking
1094

Overview

Adrian Treves is affiliated with the University of Wisconsin-Madison in the United States. Their research primarily focuses on Environmental Science, with a substantial body of work in Ecology, Small Animals, Geography, Planning and Development, Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health, and Genetics.

Their main topics of study include:

  • Wildlife Ecology and Conservation
  • Animal Behavior and Welfare Studies
  • Geographies of human-animal interactions
  • Zoonotic diseases and public health
  • Human-Animal Interaction Studies
  • Rangeland Management and Livestock Ecology
  • Wildlife Conservation and Criminology Analyses

Adrian Treves has published extensively in various venues, frequently contributing to:

  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
  • Biological Conservation
  • Conservation Biology
  • PLoS ONE
  • Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment

Their recent papers include:

  • Myths and assumptions about human-wildlife conflict and coexistence, 2020, Conservation Biology
  • Liberalizing the killing of endangered wolves was associated with more disappearances of collared individuals in Wisconsin, USA, 2020, Scientific Reports
  • The contribution of the LIFE program to mitigating damages caused by large carnivores in Europe, 2021, Global Ecology and Conservation
  • Large carnivore hunting and the social license to hunt, 2020, Conservation Biology
  • Evaluating how lethal management affects poaching of Mexican wolves, 2021, Royal Society Open Science

They have collaborated frequently with several researchers, including:

  • Francisco J. Santiago-Ávila
  • Naomi X. Louchouarn
  • Suzanne W. Agan
  • José Vicente López-Bao
  • Miha Krofel

Best Publications

  • Human-Carnivore Conflict and Perspectives on Carnivore Management Worldwide

    Adrian Treves;K. Ullas Karanth

  • Co-Managing Human–Wildlife Conflicts: A Review

    Adrian Treves;Robert B. Wallace;Lisa Naughton-Treves;Andrea Morales

  • Paying for Tolerance: Rural Citizens' Attitudes toward Wolf Depredation and Compensation

    Lisa Naughton-Treves;Lisa Naughton-Treves;Lisa Naughton-Treves;Rebecca Grossberg;Adrian Treves;Adrian Treves

  • Theory and method in studies of vigilance and aggregation.

    Adrian Treves

  • Temporal patterns of crop-raiding by primates: linking food availability in croplands and adjacent forest

    Lisa Naughton‐Treves;Adrian Treves;Colin Chapman;Richard Wrangham

  • Predicting Human-Carnivore Conflict: a Spatial Model Derived from 25 Years of Data on Wolf Predation on Livestock

    Adrian Treves;Adrian Treves;Lisa Naughton-Treves;Lisa Naughton-Treves;Elizabeth K. Harper;David J. Mladenoff

  • Participatory planning of interventions to mitigate human-wildlife conflicts.

    Adrian Treves;R. B. Wallace;S. White

  • Predator control should not be a shot in the dark

    Adrian Treves;Miha Krofel;Jeannine McManus

  • Tolerance for Predatory Wildlife

    Adrian Treves;Jeremy Bruskotter

  • Risk and opportunity for humans coexisting with large carnivores

    Adrian Treves;L. Naughton-Treves

  • Socio-ecological factors shaping local support for wildlife: crop-raiding by elephants and other wildlife in Africa

    Lisa Naughton-Treves;Adrian Treves

  • Longitudinal Analysis of Attitudes Toward Wolves

    Adrian Treves;Lisa Naughton-Treves;Victoria Shelley

  • Hunting for large carnivore conservation

    Adrian Treves

  • Carnivore conservation needs evidence-based livestock protection

    Lily M. van Eeden;Ann Eklund;Jennifer R. B. Miller;Jennifer R. B. Miller;José Vicente López-Bao

  • Wildlife Survival Beyond Park Boundaries: the Impact of Slash-and-Burn Agriculture and Hunting on Mammals in Tambopata, Peru

    Lisa Naughton-Treves;Lisa Naughton-Treves;Jose Luis Mena;Adrian Treves;Nora Alvarez

  • Saving the World's Terrestrial Megafauna

    William J Ripple;Guillaume Chapron;José Vicente López-Bao;Sarah M. Durant

  • People and Wildlife: Evaluating lethal control in the management of human–wildlife conflict

    Adrian Treves;Lisa Naughton-Treves

  • Nonlethal Techniques for Managing Predation: Primary and Secondary Repellents

    John A. Shivik;Adrian Treves;Peggy Callahan

  • Wolf depredation on domestic animals in Wisconsin, 1976-2000

    A Treves;RR Jurewicz;L Naughton-Treves

  • Has predation shaped the social systems of arboreal primates

    Adrian Treves

Frequent Co-Authors

Lisa Naughton-Treves
Lisa Naughton-Treves University of Wisconsin–Madison
Guillaume Chapron
Guillaume Chapron Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Chris T. Darimont
Chris T. Darimont University of Victoria
José Vicente López-Bao
José Vicente López-Bao Spanish National Research Council
Paul C. Paquet
Paul C. Paquet University of Victoria
Jeremy T. Bruskotter
Jeremy T. Bruskotter The Ohio State University
Peter A. Lindsey
Peter A. Lindsey Griffith University
Thomas M. Newsome
Thomas M. Newsome University of Sydney
Andrew J. Plumptre
Andrew J. Plumptre BirdLife international, UK
Fiona Maisels
Fiona Maisels Wildlife Conservation Society

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