Amy Gresham (she/her)
@amygresham48.bsky.social
Ecologist interested in how animals respond an ever-changing environment 🌍
Research & Development fellow | DEFRA 🌳
Postdoc | iDeer project (2023-2025) 🦌
PhD | Bangor University (2023) 🏔️
Views are my own
Research & Development fellow | DEFRA 🌳
Postdoc | iDeer project (2023-2025) 🦌
PhD | Bangor University (2023) 🏔️
Views are my own
Reposted by Amy Gresham (she/her)
Here's a link to the full review, published open access.
A scoping review of evidence for the effects of seven global deer species on woody vegetation
This scoping review summarises the current evidence for ecological effects of seven global deer species on woody vegetation, with a focus on the evenness of study across deer species, global distribu....
besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com
May 26, 2025 at 8:11 AM
Here's a link to the full review, published open access.
Well done for all the work you put in! Good things may yet come of it 😊
April 4, 2025 at 4:32 PM
Well done for all the work you put in! Good things may yet come of it 😊
Reposted by Amy Gresham (she/her)
Large wild fauna are a natural part of, and crucial to, most ecosystems, performing all sorts of key roles.
Early humans killed off most planetary megafauna, and that artificial absence has many enduring negative effects. Follow @jcsvenning.bsky.social for more on this. (3)
bsky.app/profile/jcsv...
Early humans killed off most planetary megafauna, and that artificial absence has many enduring negative effects. Follow @jcsvenning.bsky.social for more on this. (3)
bsky.app/profile/jcsv...
The evidence for Homo sapiens playing the dominant role in the global #megafauna #extinctions constitutes one of the clearest, well-supported patterns in #ecology. See our 2024 review www.cambridge.org/core/journal... #paleobiology #archeology #hunting #ecosystem #Pleistocene #defaunation #rewilding
The late-Quaternary megafauna extinctions: Patterns, causes, ecological consequences and implications for ecosystem management in the Anthropocene | Cambridge Prisms: Extinction | Cambridge Core
The late-Quaternary megafauna extinctions: Patterns, causes, ecological consequences and implications for ecosystem management in the Anthropocene - Volume 2
www.cambridge.org
March 8, 2025 at 6:23 AM
Large wild fauna are a natural part of, and crucial to, most ecosystems, performing all sorts of key roles.
Early humans killed off most planetary megafauna, and that artificial absence has many enduring negative effects. Follow @jcsvenning.bsky.social for more on this. (3)
bsky.app/profile/jcsv...
Early humans killed off most planetary megafauna, and that artificial absence has many enduring negative effects. Follow @jcsvenning.bsky.social for more on this. (3)
bsky.app/profile/jcsv...
Definitely! Two sides to the coin, depends on your woodland management objectives :)
March 13, 2025 at 7:07 PM
Definitely! Two sides to the coin, depends on your woodland management objectives :)