Publications of Stephen Blake
All genres
Journal Article (68)
1.
Journal Article
Bonobo (Pan paniscus) density and distribution in Central Africa's largest rainforest reserve: long-term survey data show pitfalls in methodological approaches and call for vigilance. International Journal of Primatology (2024)
2.
Journal Article
94 (2), e1599 (2024)
Environmental variation structures reproduction and recruitment in long-lived mega-herbivores: Galapagos giant tortoises. Ecological Monographs 3.
Journal Article
14 (2), e10994 (2024)
Invasion by Cedrela odorata threatens long distance migration of Galapagos tortoises. Ecology and Evolution 4.
Journal Article
12 (1), 32 (2024)
Using non-continuous accelerometry to identify cryptic nesting events of Galapagos giant tortoises. Animal Biotelemetry 5.
Journal Article
Habitat quality in farmland influences the activity patterns of giant Galapagos tortoises. Biodiversity and Conservation (2024)
6.
Journal Article
A deep dive into the waterbird community of an urban oasis: implications for park management. Urban Ecosystems (2024)
7.
Journal Article
26 (4), pp. 1181 - 1189 (2023)
Home ranges of box turtles in a rural woodland and an urban park in Saint Louis, MO; implications for turtle conservation. Urban Ecosystems 8.
Journal Article
13 (4), e10008 (2023)
Temperature along an elevation gradient determines Galapagos tortoise sex ratios. Ecology and Evolution 9.
Journal Article
38, pp. 501 - 516 (2023)
Navigating agricultural landscapes: responses of critically endangered giant tortoises to farmland vegetation and infrastructure. Landscape Ecology 10.
Journal Article
56 (1), pp. 16 - 25 (2022)
Body size, sex and high philopatry influence the use of agricultural land by Galapagos giant tortoises. Oryx 11.
Journal Article
37, e02171 (2022)
Sharing land with giants: Habitat preferences of Galapagos tortoises on farms. Global Ecology and Conservation 12.
Journal Article
12 (10), e03753 (2021)
A greener future for the Galapagos: forecasting ecosystem productivity by finding climate analogs in time. Ecosphere 13.
Journal Article
51 (4), pp. 848 - 855 (2021)
Field anesthesia and gonadal morphology of immature Western Santa Cruz tortoises (Chelonoidis porteri). Journal of zoo and Wildlife Medicine 14.
Journal Article
31 (11), pp. 2437 - 2445 (2021)
Human footprint and protected areas shape elephant range across Africa. Current Biology 15.
Journal Article
100 (6), e02658 (2019)
Migration triggers in a large herbivore: Galápagos giant tortoises navigating resource gradients on volcanoes. Ecology 16.
Journal Article
11 (10), 2937 (2019)
Identifying shared strategies and solutions to the human–giant tortoise interactions in Santa Cruz, Galapagos: A nominal group technique application. Sustainability 17.
Journal Article
12, pp. 725 - 729 (2019)
Carbon stocks in central African forests enhanced by elephant disturbance. Nature Geoscience 18.
Journal Article
66, pp. 900 - 908 (2019)
Antimicrobial resistance genes present in the faecal microbiota of free-living Galapagos tortoises (Chelonoidis porteri). Zoonoses and Public Health 19.
Journal Article
28 (3), pp. 854 - 864 (2018)
Applying network theory to animal movements to identify properties of landscape space use. Ecological Applications 20.
Journal Article
4 (4), eaar2964 (2018)
Guns, germs, and trees determine density and distribution of gorillas and chimpanzees in Western Equatorial Africa. Science Advances 21.
Journal Article
359 (6374), pp. 466 - 469 (2018)
Moving in the Anthropocene: Global reductions in terrestrial mammalian movements. Science 22.
Journal Article
5, 12 (2017)
Suite of simple metrics reveals common movement syndromes across vertebrate taxa. BMC Movement Ecology 23.
Journal Article
209, pp. 1 - 10 (2017)
Ecosystem implications of conserving endemic versus eradicating introduced large herbivores in the Galapagos Archipelago. Biological Conservation 24.
Journal Article
126 (7), pp. 1004 - 1019 (2017)
Animal movement in the absence of predation: Environmental drivers of movement strategies in a partial migration system. Oikos 25.
Journal Article
12 (7), e0181333 (2017)
Plant species dispersed by Galapagos tortoises surf the wave of habitat suitability under anthropogenic climate change. PLoS One 26.
Journal Article
27 (4), pp. R134 - R135 (2017)
Poaching empties critical Central African wilderness of forest elephants. Current Biology 27.
Journal Article
86 (4), pp. 972 - 982 (2017)
Benefits of the destinations, not costs of the journeys, shape partial migration patterns. Journal of Animal Ecology 28.
Journal Article
4, 15 (2016)
Flexible characterization of animal movement pattern using net squared displacement and a latent state model. BMC Movement Ecology 29.
Journal Article
85 (5), pp. 1171 - 1181 (2016)
Allometric and temporal scaling of movement characteristics in Galapagos tortoises. Journal of Animal Ecology 30.
Journal Article
39 (2), pp. 194 - 203 (2016)
Megafauna extinction, tree species range reduction, and carbon storage in Amazonian forests. Ecography 31.
Journal Article
52 (2), pp. 378 - 382 (2016)
Clinical mycoplasma sp infections in free-living three-toed box turtles (Terrapene carolina triunguis) in Missouri, USA. Journal of Wildlife Diseases 32.
Journal Article
47 (1), pp. 196 - 205 (2016)
Comparison of total leukocyte quantification methods in free-living galapagos tortoises (chelonoidis spp.). Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 33.
Journal Article
47 (2), pp. 246 - 258 (2015)
The dominance of introduced plant species in the diets of migratory galapagos tortoises increases with elevation on a human-occupied island. Biotropica 34.
Journal Article
Migration by Galapagos giant tortoises requires landscape-scale conservation efforts. Galapagos report 2013-2014, pp. 144 - 150 (2015)
35.
Journal Article
52 (3), pp. 544 - 551 (2015)
Developing fencing policies for dryland ecosystems. Journal of Applied Ecology 36.
Journal Article
9 (12), e114154 (2014)
Protected areas in tropical Africa: Assessing threats and conservation activities. PLoS One 37.
Journal Article
82 (2), pp. 310 - 321 (2013)
Vegetation dynamics drive segregation by body size in Galapagos tortoises migrating across altitudinal gradients. Journal of Animal Ecology 38.
Journal Article
16 (11), pp. 1413 - e3 (2013)
Conserving large populations of lions - The argument for fences has holes. Ecology Letters 39.
Journal Article
22 (13-14), pp. 3085 - 3104 (2013)
Human proximity and habitat fragmentation are key drivers of the rangewide bonobo distribution. Biodiversity and Conservation 40.
Journal Article
8 (3), e59469 (2013)
Devastating decline of forest elephants in Central Africa. PLoS One 41.
Journal Article
39 (11), pp. 1961 - 1972 (2012)
Seed dispersal by Galapagos tortoises. Journal of Biogeography 42.
Journal Article
18 (11), pp. 1077 - 1091 (2012)
Recent decline in suitable environmental conditions for African great apes. Diversity and Distributions 43.
Journal Article
489 (7415), pp. 290 - 294 (2012)
Averting biodiversity collapse in tropical forest protected areas. Nature 44.
Journal Article
44 (4), pp. 445 - 448 (2012)
Movement patterns and spatial relationships among African forest elephants. Biotropica 45.
Journal Article
37 (6), pp. 542 - 553 (2011)
Megagardeners of the forest - the role of elephants in seed dispersal. Acta oecologica: international journal of ecology 46.
Journal Article
6 (2), pp. 110 - 129 (2011)
Frugivory and seed dispersal in the Galapagos: What is the state of the art? Integrative Zoology 47.
Journal Article
160 (4), pp. 493 - 497 (2011)
Digesta retention time in the Galapagos tortoise (Chelonoidis nigra). Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-Molecular & Integrative Physiology 48.
Journal Article
80 (5), pp. 1088 - 1096 (2011)
One size does not fit all: Flexible models are required to understand animal movement across scales. Journal of Animal Ecology 49.
Journal Article
21 (4), pp. 1296 - 1307 (2011)
The spatial structure of hunter access determines the local abundance of forest elephants (Loxodonta africana cyclotis). Ecological Applications 50.
Journal Article
67, pp. 62 - 64 (2010)
Unnatural selection in Galapagos: The role of disease in Darwin’s finches (Geospizinae). Galapagos Research