Davide Mirante
@davidemirante.bsky.social
PhD student at Sapienza University of Rome. Interested in conservation biology, with a particular focus on the effect of human activities on wildlife behavior, physiology and distribution.
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Davide-Mirante
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Davide-Mirante
Absolutely lovely initiative. Thanks!
December 20, 2024 at 3:15 PM
Absolutely lovely initiative. Thanks!
May I add Christoph Waltz. Or at least, don't insist on it.
December 12, 2024 at 6:07 PM
May I add Christoph Waltz. Or at least, don't insist on it.
I simply loved this read. Extremely informative, and a finally legitimate approach to a topic that is nuanced and complex. Would you mind sharing some references to support these points? (Unless you did share them somewhere already, I easily get lost in Bsky threads from mobile).
December 11, 2024 at 4:55 PM
I simply loved this read. Extremely informative, and a finally legitimate approach to a topic that is nuanced and complex. Would you mind sharing some references to support these points? (Unless you did share them somewhere already, I easily get lost in Bsky threads from mobile).
By modeling species detection as a function of spatial and temporal proxies of human disturbance, we found temporal avoidance to be the prevailing strategy in local species. Only one species did not show any response. You may ask, who could ever be that arrogant? Well, look by yourself.🐗
November 28, 2024 at 3:30 PM
By modeling species detection as a function of spatial and temporal proxies of human disturbance, we found temporal avoidance to be the prevailing strategy in local species. Only one species did not show any response. You may ask, who could ever be that arrogant? Well, look by yourself.🐗
We conducted a year-long camera-trapping study on the mammalian community of a small private reserve in Italy. We also recorded timing, location, and number of people involved in any sort of activity held in the study area during the sampling (including me yelling at malfunctioning camera traps).
a man in a suit and tie is saying no ! god ! please ! no .
ALT: a man in a suit and tie is saying no ! god ! please ! no .
media.tenor.com
November 28, 2024 at 3:19 PM
We conducted a year-long camera-trapping study on the mammalian community of a small private reserve in Italy. We also recorded timing, location, and number of people involved in any sort of activity held in the study area during the sampling (including me yelling at malfunctioning camera traps).