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Dive into the research topics where Frederic Beaudry is active.

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Featured researches published by Frederic Beaudry.


Ecological Applications | 2012

Economic-based projections of future land use in the conterminous United States under alternative policy scenarios

Volker C. Radeloff; Erik Nelson; Andrew J. Plantinga; David J. Lewis; David P. Helmers; Joshua J. Lawler; John C. Withey; Frederic Beaudry; Sebastián Martinuzzi; Van Butsic; Eric Lonsdorf; Denis White; Stephen Polasky

Land-use change significantly contributes to biodiversity loss, invasive species spread, changes in biogeochemical cycles, and the loss of ecosystem services. Planning for a sustainable future requires a thorough understanding of expected land use at the fine spatial scales relevant for modeling many ecological processes and at dimensions appropriate for regional or national-level policy making. Our goal was to construct and parameterize an econometric model of land-use change to project future land use to the year 2051 at a fine spatial scale across the conterminous United States under several alternative land-use policy scenarios. We parameterized the econometric model of land-use change with the National Resource Inventory (NRI) 1992 and 1997 land-use data for 844 000 sample points. Land-use transitions were estimated for five land-use classes (cropland, pasture, range, forest, and urban). We predicted land-use change under four scenarios: business-as-usual, afforestation, removal of agricultural subsidies, and increased urban rents. Our results for the business-as-usual scenario showed widespread changes in land use, affecting 36% of the land area of the conterminous United States, with large increases in urban land (79%) and forest (7%), and declines in cropland (-16%) and pasture (-13%). Areas with particularly high rates of land-use change included the larger Chicago area, parts of the Pacific Northwest, and the Central Valley of California. However, while land-use change was substantial, differences in results among the four scenarios were relatively minor. The only scenario that was markedly different was the afforestation scenario, which resulted in an increase of forest area that was twice as high as the business-as-usual scenario. Land-use policies can affect trends, but only so much. The basic economic and demographic factors shaping land-use changes in the United States are powerful, and even fairly dramatic policy changes, showed only moderate deviations from the business-as-usual scenario. Given the magnitude of predicted land-use change, any attempts to identify a sustainable future or to predict the effects of climate change will have to take likely land-use changes into account. Econometric models that can simulate land-use change for broad areas with fine resolution are necessary to predict trends in ecosystem service provision and biodiversity persistence.


Biological Conservation | 2008

Identifying road mortality threat at multiple spatial scales for semi-aquatic turtles

Frederic Beaudry; Phillip G. deMaynadier; Malcolm L. Hunter


Journal of Wildlife Management | 2010

Identifying Hot Moments in Road-Mortality Risk for Freshwater Turtles

Frederic Beaudry; Phillip G. deMaynadier; Malcolm L. Hunter


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2011

Cost-effectiveness of strategies to establish a European bison metapopulation in the Carpathians

Tobias Kuemmerle; Kajetan Perzanowski; H. Resit Akçakaya; Frederic Beaudry; Timothy R. Van Deelen; Ivan Parnikoza; Pavlo Khoyetskyy; Donald M. Waller; Volker C. Radeloff


Journal of Herpetology | 2009

Seasonally Dynamic Habitat Use by Spotted (Clemmys guttata) and Blanding's Turtles (Emydoidea blandingii) in Maine

Frederic Beaudry; Phillip G. deMaynadier; Malcolm L. Hunter


Biological Conservation | 2010

Modeling regional-scale habitat of forest birds when land management guidelines are needed but information is limited

Frederic Beaudry; Anna M. Pidgeon; Volker C. Radeloff; Robert W. Howe; David J. Mladenoff; Gerald A. Bartelt


Herpetological Conservation and Biology | 2010

Nesting movements and the use of anthropogenic nesting sites by Spotted Turtles (Clemmys guttata) and Blanding's Turtles (Emydoidea blandingii).

Frederic Beaudry; P. G. de Maynadier; Malcolm L. Hunter


Biological Conservation | 2013

The loss of forest birds habitats under different land use policies as projected by a coupled ecological-econometric model

Frederic Beaudry; Volker C. Radeloff; Anna M. Pidgeon; Andrew J. Plantinga; David J. Lewis; David P. Helmers; Van Butsic


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2011

Optimizing regional conservation planning for forest birds

Frederic Beaudry; Anna M. Pidgeon; David J. Mladenoff; Robert W. Howe; Gerald A. Bartelt; Volker C. Radeloff


Journal of Wildlife Management | 2011

Shifting threats faced by the San Clemente sage sparrow

Brian Hudgens; Frederic Beaudry; T. Luke George; Sara Kaiser; Nicole M. Munkwitz

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Volker C. Radeloff

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Anna M. Pidgeon

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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David P. Helmers

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Van Butsic

University of California

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David J. Mladenoff

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Denis White

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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