Animal Conservation

Papers
(The H4-Index of Animal Conservation is 17. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2020-04-01 to 2024-04-01.)
ArticleCitations
Drivers of taxonomic bias in conservation research: a global analysis of terrestrial mammals52
There will be conflict – agricultural landscapes are prime, rather than marginal, habitats for Asian elephants46
Bat conservation and zoonotic disease risk: a research agenda to prevent misguided persecution in the aftermath of COVID‐1939
The response of arboreal marsupials to long‐term changes in forest disturbance38
Conservation in the maelstrom of Covid‐19 – a call to action to solve the challenges, exploit opportunities and prepare for the next pandemic37
An applied ecology of fear framework: linking theory to conservation practice34
Megafire causes persistent loss of an old‐forest species30
Loss of heat acclimation capacity could leave subterranean specialists highly sensitive to climate change25
Resilient responses by bats to a severe wildfire: conservation implications24
Projected climate change threatens Himalayan brown bear habitat more than human land use23
Mixing genetically differentiated populations successfully boosts diversity of an endangered carnivore23
Social media reveals consistently disproportionate tourism pressure on a threatened marine vertebrate21
Habitat fragmentation affects movement and space use of a specialist folivore, the koala21
Why do eggs fail? Causes of hatching failure in threatened populations and consequences for conservation20
Secondary tropical forests recover dung beetle functional diversity and trait composition19
Unraveling the complexity of human–tiger conflicts in the Leuser Ecosystem, Sumatra19
DNA Zip‐coding: identifying the source populations supplying the international trade of a critically endangered coastal shark19
Artificial light may change flight patterns of bats near bridges along urban waterways17
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