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Dive into the research topics where Claire Porter is active.

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Featured researches published by Claire Porter.


PLOS ONE | 2012

An Emperor Penguin Population Estimate: The First Global, Synoptic Survey of a Species from Space

Peter T. Fretwell; Michelle A. LaRue; Paul Morin; Gerald L. Kooyman; Barbara Wienecke; Norman Ratcliffe; Adrian J. Fox; Andrew H. Fleming; Claire Porter; Phil N. Trathan

Our aim was to estimate the population of emperor penguins (Aptenodytes fosteri) using a single synoptic survey. We examined the whole continental coastline of Antarctica using a combination of medium resolution and Very High Resolution (VHR) satellite imagery to identify emperor penguin colony locations. Where colonies were identified, VHR imagery was obtained in the 2009 breeding season. The remotely-sensed images were then analysed using a supervised classification method to separate penguins from snow, shadow and guano. Actual counts of penguins from eleven ground truthing sites were used to convert these classified areas into numbers of penguins using a robust regression algorithm. We found four new colonies and confirmed the location of three previously suspected sites giving a total number of emperor penguin breeding colonies of 46. We estimated the breeding population of emperor penguins at each colony during 2009 and provide a population estimate of ∼238,000 breeding pairs (compared with the last previously published count of 135,000–175,000 pairs). Based on published values of the relationship between breeders and non-breeders, this translates to a total population of ∼595,000 adult birds. There is a growing consensus in the literature that global and regional emperor penguin populations will be affected by changing climate, a driver thought to be critical to their future survival. However, a complete understanding is severely limited by the lack of detailed knowledge about much of their ecology, and importantly a poor understanding of their total breeding population. To address the second of these issues, our work now provides a comprehensive estimate of the total breeding population that can be used in future population models and will provide a baseline for long-term research.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2014

Honey, Hadza, hunter-gatherers, and human evolution

Frank W. Marlowe; J. Colette Berbesque; Brian M. Wood; Alyssa N. Crittenden; Claire Porter; Audax Mabulla

Honey is the most energy dense food in nature. It is therefore not surprising that, where it exists, honey is an important food for almost all hunter-gatherers. Here we describe and analyze widespread honey collecting among foragers and show that where it is absent, in arctic and subarctic habitats, honey bees are also rare to absent. Second, we focus on one hunter-gatherer society, the Hadza of Tanzania. Hadza men and women both rank honey as their favorite food. Hadza acquire seven types of honey. Hadza women usually acquire honey that is close to the ground while men often climb tall baobab trees to raid the largest bee hives with stinging bees. Honey accounts for a substantial proportion of the kilocalories in the Hadza diet, especially that of Hadza men. Cross-cultural forager data reveal that in most hunter-gatherers, men acquire more honey than women but often, as with the Hadza, women do acquire some. Virtually all warm-climate foragers consume honey. Our closest living relatives, the great apes, take honey when they can. We suggest that honey has been part of the diet of our ancestors dating back to at least the earliest hominins. The earliest hominins, however, would have surely been less capable of acquiring as much honey as more recent, fully modern human hunter-gatherers. We discuss reasons for thinking our early ancestors would have acquired less honey than foragers ethnographically described, yet still significantly more than our great ape relatives.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Polar bears from space: Assessing satellite imagery as a tool to track Arctic wildlife

Seth Stapleton; Michelle A. LaRue; Nicolas Lecomte; Stephen N. Atkinson; David L. Garshelis; Claire Porter; Todd C. Atwood

Development of efficient techniques for monitoring wildlife is a priority in the Arctic, where the impacts of climate change are acute and remoteness and logistical constraints hinder access. We evaluated high resolution satellite imagery as a tool to track the distribution and abundance of polar bears. We examined satellite images of a small island in Foxe Basin, Canada, occupied by a high density of bears during the summer ice-free season. Bears were distinguished from other light-colored spots by comparing images collected on different dates. A sample of ground-truthed points demonstrated that we accurately classified bears. Independent observers reviewed images and a population estimate was obtained using mark–recapture models. This estimate (: 94; 95% Confidence Interval: 92–105) was remarkably similar to an abundance estimate derived from a line transect aerial survey conducted a few days earlier (: 102; 95% CI: 69–152). Our findings suggest that satellite imagery is a promising tool for monitoring polar bears on land, with implications for use with other Arctic wildlife. Large scale applications may require development of automated detection processes to expedite review and analysis. Future research should assess the utility of multi-spectral imagery and examine sites with different environmental characteristics.


Isprs Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing | 2016

An automated, open-source pipeline for mass production of digital elevation models (DEMs) from very-high-resolution commercial stereo satellite imagery

David E. Shean; Oleg Alexandrov; Zachary Moratto; Benjamin E. Smith; Ian Joughin; Claire Porter; Paul Morin


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2007

Earth, wind, and fire: ethnoarchaeological signals of Hadza fires

Carolina Mallol; Frank W. Marlowe; Brian M. Wood; Claire Porter


Polar Biology | 2011

Satellite imagery can be used to detect variation in abundance of Weddell seals (Leptonychotes weddellii) in Erebus Bay, Antarctica

Michelle A. LaRue; Jay J. Rotella; Robert A. Garrott; Donald B. Siniff; David G. Ainley; Glenn E. Stauffer; Claire Porter; Paul Morin


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2007

How marginal are forager habitats

Claire Porter; Frank W. Marlowe


PLOS ONE | 2012

Correction: An Emperor Penguin Population Estimate: The First Global, Synoptic Survey of a Species from Space

Peter T. Fretwell; Michelle A. LaRue; Paul Morin; Gerald L. Kooyman; Barbara Wienecke; Norman M. Ratcliffe; Adrian J. Fox; Andrew H. Fleming; Claire Porter; Phil N. Trathan


Evolution and Human Behavior | 2012

Sex differences in spatial cognition among Hadza foragers

Elizabeth Cashdan; Frank W. Marlowe; Alyssa N. Crittenden; Claire Porter; Brian M. Wood


The Cryosphere | 2014

Brief Communication: Sudden drainage of a subglacial lake beneath the Greenland Ice Sheet

Ian M. Howat; Claire Porter; Myoung-Jong Noh; Ben Smith; Seongsu Jeong

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Paul Morin

University of Minnesota

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Adrian J. Fox

British Antarctic Survey

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Gerald L. Kooyman

Scripps Institution of Oceanography

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