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Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
64
Citations
13594
World Ranking
1886
National Ranking
225

Research.com Recognitions

  • 2019 - Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh

Overview

Stephen M. Redpath is affiliated with the University of Aberdeen in the United Kingdom. Their research primarily focuses on environmental science, with a significant emphasis on wildlife ecology and conservation. This work intersects with fields including ecology, global and planetary change, ecological modeling, genetics, and social psychology.

The scientist's scholarly output covers a range of topics, notably:

  • Wildlife Ecology and Conservation
  • Species Distribution and Climate Change
  • Human-Animal Interaction Studies
  • Conservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management
  • Avian ecology and behavior
  • Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
  • Zoonotic diseases and public health

Recent publications authored or co-authored by Stephen M. Redpath include:

  • Non-material costs of wildlife conservation to local people and their implications for conservation interventions, 2020, Biological Conservation
  • European bird declines: Do we need to rethink approaches to the management of abundant generalist predators?, 2020, Journal of Applied Ecology
  • Understanding and overcoming obstacles in adaptive management, 2022, Trends in Ecology & Evolution
  • Integrating scientific and local knowledge to address conservation conflicts: Towards a practical framework based on lessons learned from a Scottish case study, 2020, Environmental Science & Policy
  • Applying Participatory Processes to Address Conflicts Over the Conservation of Large Carnivores: Understanding Conditions for Successful Management, 2020, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution

Stephen M. Redpath's frequent collaborators include:

  • Juliette Young
  • Charudutt Mishra
  • Kulbhushansingh Suryawanshi
  • Johan Månsson
  • Johan Elmberg

Their work has been published repeatedly in venues such as:

  • People and Nature
  • Biological Conservation
  • Journal of Applied Ecology
  • Society & Natural Resources
  • Trends in Ecology & Evolution

Stephen M. Redpath was recognized as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 2019.

Best Publications

  • Understanding and managing conservation conflicts

    Steve M. Redpath;Juliette Young;Anna Evely;William M. Adams

  • Tilting at wildlife: reconsidering human–wildlife conflict

    Stephen Mark Redpath;Saloni Bhatia;Juliette Young

  • The emergence of biodiversity conflicts from biodiversity impacts: characteristics and management strategies

    Juliette C. Young;Mariella Marzano;Rehema M. White;David I. McCracken

  • An interdisciplinary review of current and future approaches to improving human-predator relations

    S. Pooley;M. Barua;W. Beinart;A. Dickman

  • People, predators and perceptions: patterns of livestock depredation by snow leopards and wolves

    Kulbhushansingh R. Suryawanshi;Yash Veer Bhatnagar;Stephen Redpath;Charudutt Mishra

  • Rabbits as a keystone species in southern Europe

    Miguel Delibes-Mateos;Steve M. Redpath;Elena Angulo;Pablo Ferreras

  • Habitat fragmentation and the individual : tawny owls Strix aluco in woodland patches

    S. M. Redpath

  • Raptors and Red Grouse: Conservation Conflicts and Management Solutions

    Simon Thirgood;Steve Redpath;Ian Newton;Peter Hudson

  • Birds of prey as limiting factors of gamebird populations in Europe: a review

    Jari Valkama;Erkki Korpimäki;Beatriz E. Arroyo;Pedro Beja

  • Using Decision Modeling with Stakeholders to Reduce Human–Wildlife Conflict: a Raptor–Grouse Case Study

    S. M. Redpath;B. E. Arroyo;F. M. Leckie;P. Bacon

  • ASSESSING RAPTOR DIET: COMPARING PELLETS, PREY REMAINS, AND OBSERVATIONAL DATA AT HEN HARRIER NESTS

    Stephen M. Redpath;Roger Clarke;Mike Madders;Simon J. Thirgood

  • Don't forget to look down - collaborative approaches to predator conservation

    Steve M. Redpath;John D. C. Linnell;Marco Festa-Bianchet;Luigi Boitani

  • Numerical and functional responses in generalist predators: hen harriers and peregrines on Scottish grouse moors

    Stephen M. Redpath;Simon J. Thirgood

  • Developing an integrated conceptual framework to understand biodiversity conflicts

    Rehema M. White;Anke Fischer;Keith Marshall;Justin M.J. Travis

  • Birds of prey and red grouse

    S. M. Redpath;S. J. Thirgood

  • Raptor predation and population limitation in red grouse

    Simon J. Thirgood;Stephen M. Redpath;Peter Rothery;Nicholas J. Aebischer

  • Conflicts in conservation: Navigating towards solutions

    Stephen M. Redpath;R. J. Gutiérrez;Kevin A. Wood;Juliette C. Young

  • Hen harriers and red grouse: science, politics and human–wildlife conflict

    Simon Thirgood;Steve Redpath

  • Testosterone, immunocompetence, and honest sexual signaling in male red grouse

    François Mougeot;Justin R. Irvine;Linzi Seivwright;Steve M. Redpath

  • To graze or not to graze? Sheep, voles, forestry and nature conservation in the British uplands

    Darren M. Evans;Stephen M. Redpath;David A. Elston;Sharon A. Evans

  • Beyond conflict: exploring the spectrum of human–wildlife interactions and their underlying mechanisms

    Saloni Bhatia;Stephen Mark Redpath;Kulbhushansingh Suryawanshi;Charudutt Mishra

Frequent Co-Authors

François Mougeot
François Mougeot Spanish National Research Council
Arjun Amar
Arjun Amar University of Cape Town
Darren M. Evans
Darren M. Evans Newcastle University
Iain J. Gordon
Iain J. Gordon James Hutton Institute
Charudutt Mishra
Charudutt Mishra Nature Conservation Foundation
Peter J. Hudson
Peter J. Hudson Pennsylvania State University
Ralph J. Gutierrez
Ralph J. Gutierrez University of Minnesota
Jason Matthiopoulos
Jason Matthiopoulos University of Glasgow
Jesús Martínez-Padilla
Jesús Martínez-Padilla Spanish National Research Council
Todd E. Katzner
Todd E. Katzner United States Geological Survey

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