Publications by authors named "Reena H Walker"

Extreme weather events perturb ecosystems and increasingly threaten biodiversity. Ecologists emphasize the need to forecast and mitigate the impacts of these events, which requires knowledge of how risk is distributed among species and environments. However, the scale and unpredictability of extreme events complicate risk assessment-especially for large animals (megafauna), which are ecologically important and disproportionately threatened but are wide-ranging and difficult to monitor.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how individual bushbucks (a type of antelope) in an African ecosystem exhibit diet variation based on their nutritional condition and the environmental heterogeneity of food resources.
  • - It uses DNA analysis of fecal samples from GPS-collared bushbucks to assess their dietary niches, revealing significant differences in food choices both within and between different habitat types.
  • - Findings support optimal foraging theory, showing that bushbucks in better nutritional condition have less diverse diets and are more selective, indicating that availability of resources and individual health influence foraging strategies.
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Political, economic, and climatic upheaval can result in mass human migration across extreme terrain in search of more humane living conditions, exposing migrants to environments that challenge human tolerance. An empirical understanding of the biological stresses associated with these migrations will play a key role in the development of social, political, and medical strategies for alleviating adverse effects and risk of death. We model physiological stress associated with undocumented migration across a commonly traversed section of the southern border of the United States and find that locations of migrant death are disproportionately clustered within regions of greatest predicted physiological stress (evaporative water loss).

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In despotically driven animal societies, one or a few individuals tend to have a disproportionate influence on group decision-making and actions. However, global communication allows each group member to assess the relative strength of preferences for different options among their group-mates. Here, we investigate collective decisions by free-ranging African wild dog packs in Botswana.

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