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Dive into the research topics where Marcus Rowcliffe is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcus Rowcliffe.


Conservation Biology | 2010

Hunter reporting of catch per unit effort as a monitoring tool in a bushmeat-harvesting system.

Janna Rist; E. J. Milner-Gulland; Guy Cowlishaw; Marcus Rowcliffe

Growing threats to biodiversity in the tropics mean there is an increasing need for effective monitoring that balances scientific rigor with practical feasibility. Alternatives to professional techniques are emerging that are based on the involvement of local people. Such locally based monitoring methods may be more sustainable over time, allow greater spatial coverage and quicker management decisions, lead to increased compliance, and help encourage attitude shifts toward more environmentally sustainable practices. Nevertheless, few studies have yet compared the findings or cost-effectiveness of locally based methods with professional techniques or investigated the power of locally based methods to detect trends. We gathered data on bushmeat-hunting catch and effort using a professional technique (accompanying hunters on hunting trips) and two locally based methods in which data were collected by hunters (hunting camp diaries and weekly hunter interviews) in a 15-month study in Equatorial Guinea. Catch and effort results from locally based methods were strongly correlated with those of the professional technique and the spatial locations of hunting trips reported in the locally based methods accurately reflected those recorded with the professional technique. We used power simulations of catch and effort data to show that locally based methods can reliably detect meaningful levels of change (20% change with 80% power at significance level [alpha]= 0.05) in multispecies catch per unit effort. Locally based methods were the most cost-effective for monitoring. Hunter interviews collected catch and effort data on 240% more hunts per person hour and 94% more hunts per unit cost, spent on monitoring, than the professional technique. Our results suggest that locally based monitoring can offer an accurate, cost-effective, and sufficiently powerful method to monitor the status of natural resources. To establish such a system in Equatorial Guinea, the current lack of national and local capacity for monitoring and management must be addressed.


Biology Letters | 2007

The impact of armed conflict on protected-area efficacy in Central Africa

Emmanuel de Merode; Kes Hillman Smith; Katherine Homewood; Richard A. Pettifor; Marcus Rowcliffe; Guy Cowlishaw

What determines the vulnerability of protected areas, a fundamental component of biodiversity conservation, to political instability and warfare? We investigated the efficacy of park protection at Garamba National Park (Democratic Republic of Congo) before, during and after a period of armed conflict. Previous analysis has shown that bushmeat hunting in the park increased fivefold during the conflict, but then declined, in conjunction with changes in the sociopolitical structures (social institutions) that controlled the local bushmeat trade. We used park patrol records to investigate whether these changes were facilitated by a disruption to anti-poaching patrols. Contrary to expectation, anti-poaching patrols remained frequent during the conflict (as bushmeat offtake increased) and decreased afterwards (when bushmeat hunting also declined). These results indicate that bushmeat extraction was determined primarily by the social institutions. Although we found a demonstrable effect of anti-poaching patrols on hunting pressure, even a fourfold increase in patrol frequency would have been insufficient to cope with wartime poaching levels. Thus, anti-poaching patrols alone may not always be the most cost-effective means of managing protected areas, and protected-area efficacy might be enhanced by also working with those institutions that already play a role in regulating local natural-resource use.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2016

Climate forcing of an emerging pathogenic fungus across a montane multi-host community

Frances C. Clare; Julia B. Halder; Olivia Daniel; Jon Bielby; Mikhail A. Semenov; Thibaut Jombart; Adeline Loyau; Dirk S. Schmeller; Andrew A. Cunningham; Marcus Rowcliffe; Trenton W. J. Garner; Jaime Bosch; Matthew C. Fisher

Changes in the timings of seasonality as a result of anthropogenic climate change are predicted to occur over the coming decades. While this is expected to have widespread impacts on the dynamics of infectious disease through environmental forcing, empirical data are lacking. Here, we investigated whether seasonality, specifically the timing of spring ice-thaw, affected susceptibility to infection by the emerging pathogenic fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) across a montane community of amphibians that are suffering declines and extirpations as a consequence of this infection. We found a robust temporal association between the timing of the spring thaw and Bd infection in two host species, where we show that an early onset of spring forced high prevalences of infection. A third highly susceptible species (the midwife toad, Alytes obstetricans) maintained a high prevalence of infection independent of time of spring thaw. Our data show that perennially overwintering midwife toad larvae may act as a year-round reservoir of infection with variation in time of spring thaw determining the extent to which infection spills over into sympatric species. We used future temperature projections based on global climate models to demonstrate that the timing of spring thaw in this region will advance markedly by the 2050s, indicating that climate change will further force the severity of infection. Our findings on the effect of annual variability on multi-host infection dynamics show that the community-level impact of fungal infectious disease on biodiversity will need to be re-evaluated in the face of climate change. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Tackling emerging fungal threats to animal health, food security and ecosystem resilience’.


PLOS ONE | 2018

The use of mosquito nets in fisheries: A global perspective

Rebecca E Short; Rajina Gurung; Marcus Rowcliffe; Nicholas Hill; E. J. Milner-Gulland

Free or subsidised mosquito net (MN) distribution has been an increasingly important tool in efforts to combat malaria in recent decades throughout the developing world, making great strides towards eradicating this hugely detrimental disease. However, there has been increasing concern in the natural resource management and healthcare communities over alternative use of MNs, particularly in artisanal fisheries where it has been suggested they pose a threat to sustainability of fish stocks. So far, little evidence has been presented as to the global prevalence and characteristics of MN fishing, limiting global management initiatives and incentives for action across disciplines. We conducted a rapid global assessment of mosquito net fishing (MNF) observations from expert witnesses living and/or working in malarial zones using an internet survey. MNF was found to be a broadly pan-tropical activity, particularly prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa. MNF is conducted using a variety of deployment methods and scales including seine nets, scoop/dip nets, set nets and traps. MNF was witnessed in a broad range of marine and freshwater habitats and was seen to exploit a wide range of taxa, with capture of juvenile fish reported in more than half of responses. Perceived drivers of MNF were closely related to poverty, revealing potentially complex and arguably detrimental livelihood and food security implications which we discuss in light of current literature and management paradigms. The key policies likely to influence future impacts of MNF are in health, regarding net distribution, and natural resource management regarding restrictions on use. We outline critical directions for research and highlight the need for a collaborative, interdisciplinary approach to development of both localised and broad-scale policy.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Characterising wildlife trade market supply-demand dynamics

James Mcnamara; Marcus Rowcliffe; Guy Cowlishaw; Justine Shanti Alexander; Yaa Ntiamoa-Baidu; A. Brenya; E. J. Milner-Gulland

The trade in wildlife products can represent an important source of income for poor people, but also threaten wildlife locally, regionally and internationally. Bushmeat provides livelihoods for hunters, traders and sellers, protein to rural and urban consumers, and has depleted the populations of many tropical forest species. Management interventions can be targeted towards the consumers or suppliers of wildlife products. There has been a general assumption in the bushmeat literature that the urban trade is driven by consumer demand with hunters simply fulfilling this demand. Using the urban bushmeat trade in the city of Kumasi, Ghana, as a case study, we use a range of datasets to explore the processes driving the urban bushmeat trade. We characterise the nature of supply and demand by explicitly considering three market attributes: resource condition, hunter behaviour, and consumer behaviour. Our results suggest that bushmeat resources around Kumasi are becoming increasingly depleted and are unable to meet demand, that hunters move in and out of the trade independently of price signals generated by the market, and that, for the Kumasi bushmeat system, consumption levels are driven not by consumer choice but by shortfalls in supply and consequent price responses. Together, these results indicate that supply-side processes dominate the urban bushmeat trade in Kumasi. This suggests that future management interventions should focus on changing hunter behaviour, although complementary interventions targeting consumer demand are also likely to be necessary in the long term. Our approach represents a structured and repeatable method to assessing market dynamics in information-poor systems. The findings serve as a caution against assuming that wildlife markets are demand driven, and highlight the value of characterising market dynamics to inform appropriate management.


Science | 2008

Compromised Survivorship in Zoo Elephants

Ros Clubb; Marcus Rowcliffe; Phyllis C. Lee; Khyne U. Mar; Cynthia J. Moss; Georgia Mason


Animal Welfare | 2009

Fecundity and population viability in female zoo elephants: problems and possible solutions.

Ros Clubb; Marcus Rowcliffe; Phyllis C. Lee; Khyne U. Mar; Cynthia J. Moss; Georgia Mason


Biological Conservation | 2008

Evaluating measures of hunting effort in a bushmeat system

Janna Rist; Marcus Rowcliffe; Guy Cowlishaw; E. J. Milner-Gulland


Biological Conservation | 2015

Synthesising bushmeat research effort in West and Central Africa: A new regional database

G. Taylor; Jörn P. W. Scharlemann; Marcus Rowcliffe; Noëlle F. Kümpel; Michael B. J. Harfoot; John E. Fa; R. Melisch; E. J. Milner-Gulland; Shonil A. Bhagwat; Katharine Abernethy; A. S. Ajonina; Lise Albrechtsen; S.M. Allebone-Webb; E. Brown; D. Brugiere; Connie J. Clark; Montserrat Colell; Guy Cowlishaw; D. J. Crookes; E. De Merode; J. Dupain; Tamsyn East; D. Edderai; Paul W. Elkan; David J. C. Gill; E. Greengrass; C. Hodgkinson; O. Ilambu; P. Jeanmart; Javier Juste


Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation | 2017

A review of camera trapping for conservation behaviour research

Anthony Caravaggi; Peter B. Banks; A. Cole Burton; Caroline M. V. Finlay; Peter M. Haswell; Matt W. Hayward; Marcus Rowcliffe; Michael D. Wood

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Guy Cowlishaw

Zoological Society of London

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Andrew A. Cunningham

Zoological Society of London

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Frances C. Clare

Zoological Society of London

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Janna Rist

Zoological Society of London

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Jon Bielby

Zoological Society of London

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