Publications by authors named "Mike Perry"

Proatheris superciliaris, the lowland swamp viper, has a limited distribution along lakeshores and rivers in Malawi, Southern Tanzania, and central Mozambique. Its venom is known to be procoagulant. Only five P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Decision triggers are defined thresholds in the status of monitored variables that indicate when to undertake management, and avoid undesirable ecosystem change. Decision triggers are frequently recommended to conservation practitioners as a tool to facilitate evidence-based management practices, but there has been limited attention paid to how practitioners are integrating decision triggers into existing monitoring programs. We sought to understand whether conservation practitioners' use of decision triggers was influenced by the type of variables in their monitoring programs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

There is interest in large-scale and unbiased monitoring of biodiversity status and trend, but there are few published examples of such monitoring being implemented. The New Zealand Department of Conservation is implementing a monitoring program that involves sampling selected biota at the vertices of an 8-km grid superimposed over the 8.6 million hectares of public conservation land that it manages.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Predation on native fauna by non-native invasive mammals is widely documented, but effects of predation at the population level are rarely measured. Eradication of invasive mammals from islands has led to recovery of native biota, but the benefits of controlling invasive mammal populations in settings where eradication is not feasible are less understood. We used various combinations of aerially delivered toxic bait and control measures on the ground to reduce abundances of invasive rats (Rattus rattus) to low levels over large areas on mainland New Zealand and then monitored the abundance of invertebrates on replicated treatment sites to compare with abundances on similar nontreatment sites.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Invasive species are frequently the target of eradication or control programmes to mitigate their impacts. However, manipulating single species in isolation can lead to unexpected consequences for other species, with outcomes such as mesopredator release demonstrated both theoretically and empirically in vertebrate assemblages with at least two trophic levels. Less is known about the consequences of species removal in more complex assemblages where a greater number of interacting invaders increases the potential for selective species removal to result in unexpected changes in community structure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study evaluated the effectiveness of a specialized upper-gastrointestinal haemorrhage (UGIH) unit by using the Rockall scoring system to categorize patient risk factors for mortality.
  • A total of 900 patients were analyzed, revealing that the mortality rate at the specialized unit (8.1%) was lower than the national average (14%), despite treating a higher risk population.
  • The findings suggest that the specialized UGIH unit significantly improves patient outcomes, indicating that there are still opportunities for further reduction in mortality rates in UGIH cases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Increasing the prevalence of arteriovenous (AV) fistulas is crucial to decreasing the incidence and costs of dialysis access failure. Despite almost uniform agreement in the dialysis community of the need to increase AV fistulas, U.S.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF