Ripple, William J.
William J. Ripple ecologist
VIAF ID: 92101147 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/92101147
Preferred Forms
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Ripple, William J.
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Ripple, William J.
- 100 1 0 ‡a Ripple, William J.
- 100 1 _ ‡a Ripple, William J.
- 100 0 _ ‡a William J. Ripple ‡c ecologist
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (13)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Assessing elk trail and wallow impacts ... 1988: | |
Eating plants and planting forests for the climate | |
Echoes of the late Pleistocene in a novel trophic cascade between cougars and feral donkeys | |
The elephant (head) in the room: A critical look at trophy hunting | |
Extinction filters mediate the global effects of habitat fragmentation on animals | |
Food habits of the world's grey wolves | |
Geographic information systems for resource management : a compendium | |
The GIS applications book : examples in natural resources : a compendium | |
Global forest loss disproportionately erodes biodiversity in intact landscapes | |
Global reforestation and biodiversity conservation | |
Grasshopper consumption by grey wolves and implications for ecosystems | |
Habitat use of sympatric prey suggests divergent anti-predator responses to recolonizing gray wolves | |
Hunted carnivores at outsized risk | |
Hypercarnivorous apex predator could provide ecosystem services by dispersing seeds | |
The impact of large terrestrial carnivores on Pleistocene ecosystems | |
INCREASED WILLOW HEIGHTS ALONG NORTHERN YELLOWSTONE's BLACKTAIL DEER CREEK FOLLOWING WOLF REINTRODUCTION | |
Increasing beef production won't reduce emissions. | |
Infectious Agents Trigger Trophic Cascades | |
Integrating solutions to adapt cities for climate change | |
Introduced megafauna are rewilding the Anthropocene | |
Invisible megafauna | |
Large carnivores under assault in Alaska | |
Large predators and trophic cascades in terrestrial ecosystems of the western United States | |
Large‐scale responses of herbivore prey to canid predators and primary productivity | |
Large species within carnivora are large carnivores | |
Learning from the past to prepare for the future: felids face continued threat from declining prey | |
Linking a cougar decline, trophic cascade, and catastrophic regime shift in Zion National Park | |
Linking wolves to willows via risk-sensitive foraging by ungulates in the northern Yellowstone ecosystem | |
Making a New Dog? | |
Managing conflict between large carnivores and livestock | |
Monitoring the dead as an ecosystem indicator | |
Neocolonial Conservation: Is Moving Rhinos to Australia Conservation or Intellectual Property Loss | |
Novel trophic cascades: apex predators enable coexistence. | |
The paradoxical extinction of the most charismatic animals. | |
Potential trophic cascades triggered by the barred owl range expansion | |
Prey depletion as a threat to the world's large carnivores | |
Range Contractions of North American Carnivores and Ungulates | |
Recovering aspen follow changing elk dynamics in Yellowstone: evidence of a trophic cascade? | |
Recovering Riparian Plant Communities with Wolves in Northern Yellowstone, U.S.A. | |
Reducing the environmental impact of global diets. | |
Relative efforts of countries to conserve world’s megafauna | |
Reply to Kalinkat et al.: Smallest terrestrial vertebrates are highly imperiled | |
Reply to Pincheira-Donoso and Hodgson: Both the largest and smallest vertebrates have elevated extinction risk. | |
Resolving the value of the dingo in ecological restoration | |
Restoration of riparian areas following the removal of cattle in the northwestern great basin | |
Restoring landscapes of fear with wolves in the Scottish Highlands | |
Rewilding the American West | |
The rise of the mesopredator | |
River channel dynamics following extirpation of wolves in northwestern Yellowstone National Park, USA | |
The role of large predators in maintaining riparian plant communities and river morphology | |
The Roles of Large Top Predators in Coastal Ecosystems: New Insights from Long Term Ecological Research | |
Ruminants, climate change and climate policy | |
Saving the World with Satire: A Response to Chapron et al | |
Saving the World's Terrestrial Megafauna. | |
Scientists call for renewed Paris pledges to transform agriculture | |
Scientists' warning of threats to mountains | |
Scientists' warning on endangered food webs | |
Scientists' warning to humanity: microorganisms and climate change | |
Scientists' warning to humanity on illegal or unsustainable wildlife trade | |
Simultaneously operating threats cannot predict extinction risk | |
Small mammal relative abundance within riparian ecosystems of the Blue Mountains | |
Solve the biodiversity crisis with funding | |
Status and ecological effects of the world's largest carnivores | |
Strategic Forest Reserves can protect biodiversity in the western United States and mitigate climate change | |
This Is Not a Drill: An Extinction Rebellion Handbook | |
Threats to biodiversity from cumulative human impacts in one of North America's last wildlife frontiers | |
Top predators constrain mesopredator distributions | |
Towards a cohesive, holistic view of top predation: a definition, synthesis and perspective | |
Transformational change: creating a safe operating space for humanity | |
Trophic cascades in Yellowstone: The first 15 years after wolf reintroduction | |
Trophic Downgrading of Planet Earth | |
Underestimating the Challenges of Avoiding a Ghastly Future | |
What is an apex predator? | |
Wildlife-snaring crisis in Asian forests | |
Wolf reintroduction, predation risk, and cottonwood recovery in Yellowstone National Park | |
Wolves and the Ecology of Fear: Can Predation Risk Structure Ecosystems? | |
Wolves trigger a trophic cascade to berries as alternative food for grizzly bears | |
Wolves, trophic cascades, and rivers in the Olympic National Park, USA | |
World Scientists’ Warning of a Climate Emergency |