Clinton Moore, PhD (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 28
Costs of detection bias in index-based population monitoring
Managers of wildlife populations commonly rely on indirect, count-based measures of the population in making decisions regarding conservation, harvest, or control. The main appeal in the use of such counts is their low material expense compared to methods that directly measure the population. However, their correct use rests on the rarely-tested but often-assumed premise that they proportionately
Authors
C. T. Moore, W. L. Kendall
Landscape change in the southern Piedmont: challenges, solutions, and uncertainty across scales
The southern Piedmont of the southeastern United States epitomizes the complex and seemingly intractable problems and hard decisions that result from uncontrolled urban and suburban sprawl. Here we consider three recurrent themes in complicated problems involving complex systems: (1) scale dependencies and cross-scale, often nonlinear relationships; (2) resilience, in particular the potential for
Authors
M.J. Conroy, Craig R. Allen, J.T. Peterson, L.J. Pritchard, C. T. Moore
Landscape change in the Southern Piedmont: Challenges, solutions and uncertainty across scales
The southern Piedmont of the southeastern United States epitomizes the complex and seemingly intractable problems and hard decisions that result from uncontrolled urban and suburban sprawl. Here we consider three recurrent themes in complicated problems involving complex systems: (1) scale dependencies and cross-scale, often nonlinear relationships; (2) resilience, in particular the potential for
Authors
M.J. Conroy, Craig R. Allen, J.T. Peterson, L. Pritchard, C. T. Moore
Wildlife habitat modeling in an adaptive framework: The role of alternative models
No abstract available.
Authors
M.J. Conroy, C. T. Moore
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 28
Costs of detection bias in index-based population monitoring
Managers of wildlife populations commonly rely on indirect, count-based measures of the population in making decisions regarding conservation, harvest, or control. The main appeal in the use of such counts is their low material expense compared to methods that directly measure the population. However, their correct use rests on the rarely-tested but often-assumed premise that they proportionately
Authors
C. T. Moore, W. L. Kendall
Landscape change in the southern Piedmont: challenges, solutions, and uncertainty across scales
The southern Piedmont of the southeastern United States epitomizes the complex and seemingly intractable problems and hard decisions that result from uncontrolled urban and suburban sprawl. Here we consider three recurrent themes in complicated problems involving complex systems: (1) scale dependencies and cross-scale, often nonlinear relationships; (2) resilience, in particular the potential for
Authors
M.J. Conroy, Craig R. Allen, J.T. Peterson, L.J. Pritchard, C. T. Moore
Landscape change in the Southern Piedmont: Challenges, solutions and uncertainty across scales
The southern Piedmont of the southeastern United States epitomizes the complex and seemingly intractable problems and hard decisions that result from uncontrolled urban and suburban sprawl. Here we consider three recurrent themes in complicated problems involving complex systems: (1) scale dependencies and cross-scale, often nonlinear relationships; (2) resilience, in particular the potential for
Authors
M.J. Conroy, Craig R. Allen, J.T. Peterson, L. Pritchard, C. T. Moore
Wildlife habitat modeling in an adaptive framework: The role of alternative models
No abstract available.
Authors
M.J. Conroy, C. T. Moore