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Dive into the research topics where Louise D. Jasper is active.

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Featured researches published by Louise D. Jasper.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2016

The impact of natural resource use on bird and reptile communities within multiple-use protected areas: evidence from sub-arid Southern Madagascar

Charlie J. Gardner; Louise D. Jasper; Christian Eonintsoa; Julio-Josepha Duchene; Zoe G. Davies

Multiple-use protected areas, in which sustainable levels of extractive livelihood activities are permitted, play an increasingly important role in the global protected area estate, and are expected to rise in prevalence. However, we know little about their effectiveness at conserving biodiversity. We surveyed bird and reptile communities in three areas across a forest disturbance gradient resulting from charcoal production and shifting cultivation within a multiple-use protected area in Madagascar’s sub-arid spiny forest. We scored individual species using a Conservation Value Index (CVI; a simple metric based on rarity, threat and distinctiveness), and estimated the total conservation value of each treatment by calculating the sum of frequency-weighted CVI scores across all present species. Bird and reptile community responses to forest disturbance were idiosyncratic. Bird richness was greatest in the moderate-disturbance treatment, but the low-disturbance treatment had the superior conservation value due to higher frequencies of locally-endemic species. Reptile richness was the same in low- and moderate-disturbance treatments, but the conservation value of the latter was greater. The high-disturbance areas had lowest richness and conservation value for both groups. For birds, increasing disturbance levels were accompanied by community turnover from high-value to low-value species, a pattern highlighted by CVI that is masked by assessing species richness alone. Although some endemic species appear to be resilient to degradation, multiple-use protected areas in Madagascar may lose biodiversity since most endemic species are forest-dependent. Stricter protected area models may be more appropriate in areas where much of the high-value biodiversity is sensitive to habitat degradation.


Check List | 2014

Accipiter henstii (Schlegel, 1873) (Falconiformes: Accipitridae): new distribution record from southwest Madagascar

Charlie J. Gardner; Louise D. Jasper

The Near Threatened Henst’s goshawk Accipiter henstii is endemic to Madagascar and is widely distributed in the east, west and north of the country, but has been recorded only rarely from the subarid south and southwest where its occurrence remains unconfirmed across large areas. We present an observation of a breeding pair from Ranofoty in the Fiherenana River valley in southwest Madagascar, filling a gap in our knowledge of its distribution and adding to the avifauna of Ranobe-PK32 protected area.


Wetlands Ecology and Management | 2017

Rapid assessments and local knowledge reveal high bird diversity in mangroves of north-west Madagascar

Charlie J. Gardner; Zo Andriamahenina; Aude Carro; Trevor G. Jones; Louise D. Jasper

Although the importance of regulating and provisioning services provided by mangroves is widely recognised, our understanding of their role in the maintenance of terrestrial biodiversity is patchy globally and largely lacking for many regions, including conservation priorities such as Madagascar. We carried out the first multi-site bird inventory of mangroves in Madagascar and complemented our data with assessments of local knowledge, in order to broaden our knowledge of which species use this habitat. We directly observed 73 species across three sites in Ambanja and Ambaro Bays, while local respondents indicated the presence of 18 additional species: four observed species are globally threatened, while 37 are endemic to Madagascar or the Malagasy region. Over half the species observed are typically terrestrial, of which 22 have not previously been recorded in mangrove habitats in Madagascar. Local knowledge provided a useful complement to our observed data but we are likely to have underestimated total richness; nevertheless, our findings greatly increased our knowledge of mangrove use by Madagascar’s birds. However, further research is required to investigate the functional role of mangroves in the ecology of the observed species and provide insights into the factors influencing mangrove use.


Archive | 2009

The urban herpetofauna of Toliara, southwest Madagascar

Charlie J. Gardner; Louise D. Jasper


Archive | 2011

A new, isolated population of Oplurus (Iguanidae) from Tsingy de Bemaraha National Park, western Madagascar

Charlie J. Gardner; Louise D. Jasper


Herpetology Notes | 2015

A fish-scaled gecko ( Geckolepis sp.) escapes predation by a velvet gecko ( Blaesodactylus sp.) through skin shedding

Charlie J. Gardner; Louise D. Jasper


Herpetology Notes | 2015

Additions to the urban herpetofauna of Toliara, southwest Madagascar

Charlie J. Gardner; Xavier Vincke; Louise D. Jasper


Madagascar Conservation & Development | 2018

Miscellaneous behavioural observations of Malagasy birds

Charlie J. Gardner; Louise D. Jasper


Herpetology Notes | 2017

Observations of aquatic behaviour in Malagasy ground boas Acrantophis madagascariensis (Duméril & Bibron, 1844) and A. dumerili Jan, 1860

Charlie J. Gardner; Naidi McDonnell; Carlotte Ellis; Louise D. Jasper


Herpetology Notes | 2015

Diet of the endemic Malagasy day gecko Phelsuma modesta leiogaster Mertens, 1970 in an urban environment

Charlie J. Gardner; Louise D. Jasper

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Trevor G. Jones

University of British Columbia

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