 | Peer-Reviewed Publications by SFS Faculty, Staff, and Students One component of the SFS mission is to contribute to the scientific community through the dissemination of research results through peer-reviewed publications and presentations at professional meetings. Our research is designed to be rigorous, accurate, relevant, and able to hold up to peer review. We invite you to read and reference the below publications emerging from the research activities at our five field stations in 2008 and in past years in the archive links at the bottom of the page.
Our faculty, staff and students also present SFS research at a range of professional meetings and conferences around the world, including annual meetings of the Society for Conservation Biology, the Ecological Society of America, the Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute, and the National Conference for Undergraduate Research. Recent student presentations: http://www.fieldstudies.org/pages/4873_student_presentations.cfm
* Indicates SFS student, ^ indicates SFS intern or student affairs manager Häger, A. and A. Dohrenbusch. 2009. Baumartenzusammensetzung eines tropischen Bergregenwaldes entlang eines Höhengradienten – Composition of woody plant species along an altitudinal gradient in a tropical montane cloud forest-. Forstarchiv 80(6): 314-322
Molina-Murillo, S. A., and T. M. Smith. 2009. Exploring the use and impact LCA-based information in corporate communications. International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment 14: 184-194. Okello, M. M. 2009. Community participation challenges in resource conservation in Kenya’s rural landscapes: Lessons from Amboseli, Kenya. Pages 9-17 in T. Meguro, ed. Re-conceptualization of Wildlife Conservation: Towards resonation between subsistence and wildlife. African Centre for Technology Studies (ACTS) Press, Nairobi. Okello, M. M. 2009. Contraction of wildlife dispersal area and displacement by human activities in Kimana Group Ranch new Amboseli National Park, Kenya. The Open Conservation Biology Journal 3: 49-56. Okello, M. M. and K. Grasty^. 2009. Contraction and status of Maasai lands as wildlife dispersal areas and implications for wildlife conservation in Amboseli ecosystem, Kenya. Pp. 49-96 in J D. Harris and P.L. Brown (eds) Wildlife: Destruction, Conservation and Biodiversity. New York: Nova Science Publishers. Okello, M. M., S. K. Seno, and R. W. Nthiga. 2009. Reconciling people's livelihoods and environmental conservation in the rural landscapes in Kenya: opportunities and challenges in the Amboseli landscape. Natural Resources Forum 33: 123-133. Okello, M. M., and S. Yerian^. 2009. Tourist satisfaction in relation to attractions, and implications for conservation in the protected areas of the Northern Circuit, Tanzania. Journal of Sustainable Tourism 17: 1747-1764. Richardson, P. B., M. W. Bruford, M. C. Calosso^, L. M. Campbell, W. Clerveaux, A. Formia, B. J. Godley, A. C. Henderson, K. McClellan^, S. Newman, K. Parsons^, M. Pepper, S. Ranger, J. J. Silver, L. Slade, and A. C. Broderick. 2009. Marine turtles in the Turks and Caicos Islands: remnant rookeries, regionally significant foraging stocks, and a major turtle fishery. Chelonian Conservation and Biology 8(2): 192-207.
 Publication Archive

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