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43 - Conservation Science: the Need for a New Paradigm Founded on Robust Field Evidence

from Part II - Essays: Inspiring Fieldwork

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2020

Tim Burt
Affiliation:
Durham University
Des Thompson
Affiliation:
Scottish Natural Heritage
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Summary

Fieldwork provides some of my deepest memories, whether exhilarating (being attacked by snowy owls when studying their nests – I still have the multiply ripped jacket), scary (being told the faulty helicopter will probably have to crash land on the pack ice), bizarre (being courted in the dark by a wild, but originally hand-reared, kakapo, who climbed my body and mated with my head), exhilarating (finding the first albatross nest in the North Atlantic – a black-browed albatross courting the gannets in Shetland), satisfying (discovering healthy populations of red-breasted geese when thought to be on the brink of extinction), amusing (being taken for dead by a passing motorist when spread-eagled on a roadside verge, photographing rare plants), disturbing (seeing the all-too-human excitement of chimpanzees nearly killing a red colobus monkey) or breath-taking (the whale shark swimming, mouth-open, directly towards me).

Type
Chapter
Information
Curious about Nature
A Passion for Fieldwork
, pp. 317 - 319
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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References

Dodds, M. and Bilston, H. (2013). A comparison of different bat box types by bat occupancy in deciduous woodland, Buckinghamshire, UK. Conservation Evidence 10, 2428.Google Scholar
Olfson, M. and Marcus, S. C. (2013). Decline in placebo-controlled trial results suggests new directions for comparative effectiveness research. Health Affairs 32, 11161125.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Petrovan, S. O., Junker, J., Wordley, C. F. R., et al. (2018). Evidence-based synopsis of interventions, a new tool in primate conservation and research. International Journal of Primatology 39, 14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, R. K., Dicks, L. V., Mitchell, R. and Sutherland, W. J. (2014). Comparative effectiveness research: the missing link in conservation. Conservation Evidence 11, 26.Google Scholar
Woltz, H. W., Gibbs, J. P. and Ducey, P. K. (2008). Road crossing structures for amphibians and reptiles: informing design through behavioural analysis. Biological Conservation 141, 27452750.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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