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Featured researches published by Charles Curtin.


Conservation Biology | 2008

Grasslands, People, and Conservation: Over-the-Horizon Learning Exchanges between African and American Pastoralists

Charles Curtin; David Western

The worlds grasslands and large migratory populations of wildlife have been disproportionately lost or disrupted by human activities, yet are poorly represented in protected areas. The major threats they face are land subdivision and the loss of large-scale dynamic processes such as wildlife migrations and fire. The large-scale dynamical processes and ubiquity of livestock economies and cultures across the grasslands calls for an integrated ecosystem approach to conservation to make up the shortfall in protected-area coverage. Ranchers and pastoralists will be more inclined to adopt an integrated landscape approach to conservation if they also see the threats to wildlife and grassland ecosystems as affecting their livelihoods and way of life. We arranged a series of learning exchanges between African and American pastoralists, ranchers, scientists, and conservationists aimed at building the collaboration and consensus needed to conserve grasslands at a landscape level. There was broad agreement on the threat of land fragmentation to livelihoods, wildlife, and grasslands. The exchanges also identified weaknesses in prevailing public, private, and community modes of ownership in halting fragmentation. New collaborative approaches were explored to attain the benefits of privatization while keeping the landscape open. The African-U.S. exchanges showed that learning exchanges can anticipate over-the-horizon problems and speed up the feedback loops that underlie adaptive management and build social and ecological resilience.


Conservation Biology | 2007

Historic Distribution and Challenges to Bison Recovery in the Northern Chihuahuan Desert

Rurik List; Gerardo Ceballos; Charles Curtin; Peter J. P. Gogan; Jesús Pacheco; Joe Truett

Ecologists and conservationists have long assumed that large grazers, including bison (Bison bison), did not occur in post-Pleistocene southwestern North America. This perception has been influential in framing the debate over conservation and land use in the northern Chihuahuan Desert. The lack of an evolutionary history of large grazers is being used to challenge the validity of ranching as a conservation strategy and to limit the protection and reintroduction of bison as a significant component of desert grassland ecosystems. Archeological records and historical accounts from Mexican archives from AD 700 to the 19th century document that the historic range of the bison included northern Mexico and adjoining areas in the United States. The Janos-Hidalgo bison herd, one of the few free-ranging bison herds in North America, has moved between Chihuahua, Mexico, and New Mexico, United States, since at least the 1920s. The persistence of this cross-border bison herd in Chihuahuan Desert grasslands and shrublands demonstrates that the species can persist in desert landscapes. Additional lines of evidence include the existence of grazing-adapted grasslands and the results of experimental studies that document declines in vegetation density and diversity following the removal of large grazers. The Janos-Hidalgo herd was formed with animals from various sources at the turn of the 19th century. Yet the future of the herd is compromised by differing perceptions of the ecological and evolutionary role of bison in the Desert Grasslands of North America. In Mexico they are considered native and are protected by federal law, whereas in New Mexico, they are considered non-native livestock and therefore lack conservation status or federal protection. Evidence written in Spanish of the presence of bison south of the accepted range and evidence from the disciplines of archaeology and history illustrate how differences in language and academic disciplines, in addition to international boundaries, have acted as barriers in shaping comprehensive approaches to conservation. Bison recovery in the region depends on binational cooperation.


Conservation Biology | 2008

The ecological future of the North American bison: conceiving long-term, large-scale conservation of wildlife.

Eric W. Sanderson; Kent H. Redford; Bill Weber; Keith Aune; Dick Baldes; Joel Berger; Dave Carter; Charles Curtin; James N. Derr; Steve Dobrott; Eva Fearn; Craig Fleener; Steve Forrest; Craig Gerlach; C. Cormack Gates; John E. Gross; Peter J. P. Gogan; Shaun M. Grassel; Jodi Hilty; Marv Jensen; Kyran Kunkel; Duane Lammers; Rurik List; Karen Minkowski; Tom Olson; Chris Pague; Paul B. Robertson; Bob Stephenson


Conservation Biology | 2002

Livestock Grazing, Rest, and Restoration in Arid Landscapes

Charles Curtin


Conservation Biology | 2002

Integration of science and community-based conservation in the Mexico/ U.S. borderlands

Charles Curtin


Conservation Biology | 1995

Grazing and Advocacy

Charles Curtin; Thomas L. Fleischner; Carola A. Haas; James Fraser; Reed F. Noss; George Wuerthner; Joy Belsky; Bill Willers; Peter F. Brussard; Dennis D. Murphy; C. Richard Tracy


Conservation Biology | 1993

The Evolution of the U.S. National Wildlife Refuge System and the Doctrine of Compatibility

Charles Curtin


Complexity | 2010

Complex adaptive systems and game theory: An unlikely union

Mirsad Hadzikadic; Ted Carmichael; Charles Curtin


Conservation Biology | 2007

Integrating Landscape and Ecosystems Approaches through Science-Based Collaborative Conservation

Charles Curtin


Wild Rangelands: Conserving Wildlife While Maintaining Livestock in Semi-Arid Ecosystems | 2009

Financial Incentives for Rangeland Conservation: Addressing the ‘Show‐Us‐the‐Money’ Challenge

Ray Victurine; Charles Curtin

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Peter J. P. Gogan

United States Geological Survey

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Rurik List

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Bill Willers

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Bob Stephenson

Alaska Department of Fish and Game

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Chris Pague

The Nature Conservancy

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Craig Gerlach

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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