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Dive into the research topics where Rosalind Bryce is active.

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Featured researches published by Rosalind Bryce.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Impact of Management on Avian Communities in the Scottish Highlands

Scott Newey; Karen Mustin; Rosalind Bryce; Debbie A. Fielding; Steve Redpath; Nils Bunnefeld; Bronwen Daniel; R. Justin Irvine

The protection of biodiversity is a key national and international policy objective. While protected areas provide one approach, a major challenge lies in understanding how the conservation of biodiversity can be achieved in the context of multiple land management objectives in the wider countryside. Here we analyse metrics of bird diversity in the Scottish uplands in relation to land management types and explore how bird species composition varies in relation to land managed for grazing, hunting and conservation. Birds were surveyed on the heather moorland areas of 26 different landholdings in Scotland. The results indicate that, in relation to dominant management type, the composition of bird species varies but measures of diversity and species richness do not. Intensive management for grouse shooting affects the occurrence, absolute and relative abundance of bird species. While less intensive forms of land management appear to only affect the relative abundance of species, though extensive sheep grazing appears to have little effect on avian community composition. Therefore enhanced biodiversity at the landscape level is likely to be achieved by maintaining heterogeneity in land management among land management units. This result should be taken into account when developing policies that consider how to achieve enhanced biodiversity outside protected areas, in the context of other legitimate land-uses.


Oryx | 2014

Controlling invasive species by empowering environmental stakeholders: ecotourism boat operators as potential guardians of wildlife against the invasive American mink.

Elaine J. Fraser; David W. Macdonald; Rosalind Bryce; Xavier Lambin

People who have a stake in their environment are more likely to volunteer to assist conservation but they must be empowered to do so. This study explored the possibility of harnessing volunteers in the control of an invasive predator, the American mink Neovison vison , which decimates seabird colonies in coastal west Scotland. A questionnaire was sent to ecotourism boat operators, a group assumed to have an economic interest in wildlife biodiversity and a stake in their environment, to gauge their opinion on lethal control of American mink. The majority (64%) of respondents were concerned about the presence of mink in their area, agreed with control in principle and were willing to become involved in a volunteer capacity. Respondents who would not volunteer but agreed with control (21%) might reconsider if mink had a visible impact on their local wildlife. The minimum level of support people expected was information on where to get, and how to deploy, monitoring and trapping equipment. This study confirms that people with an intrinsic interest in wildlife consider themselves willing to protect their local biodiversity, with only limited resource input, such as an information pack, from external sources.


Mountain Research and Development | 2016

The Centre for Mountain Studies: Active From Scottish to Global Scales

Amy Woolvin; Rosalind Bryce; Martin F. Price

The Centre for Mountain Studies (CMS), located at Perth College, University of the Highlands and Islands, Scotland, hosts the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization Chair in Sustainable Mountain Development. Since 2000, CMS staff and students have been active in research and knowledge exchange activities at scales from the local—in Scotland—to the global (Price 2011; Glass et al 2013). In addition to hosting the Mountains of our Future Earth conference (Perth III), recent international activities have focused on climate change, biosphere reserves, social innovation, and stakeholder engagement in biodiversity research. Projects in Scotland have mainly addressed land management and local communities. The CMS also runs a part-time online MSc program in Sustainable Mountain Development.


Ecological Economics | 2015

What are shared and social values of ecosystems

Jasper O. Kenter; Liz O'Brien; Neal Hockley; Neil Ravenscroft; Ioan Fazey; Katherine N. Irvine; Mark S. Reed; Michael Christie; Emily Brady; Rosalind Bryce; Andrew Church; Nigel Cooper; Althea Davies; Anna Evely; Mark Everard; Robert Fish; Janet Fisher; Niels Jobstvogt; Claire Molloy; Johanne Orchard-Webb; Susan Ranger; Mandy Ryan; Verity Watson; Susan Williams


Ecosystem services | 2016

Subjective well-being indicators for large-scale assessment of cultural ecosystem services

Rosalind Bryce; Katherine N. Irvine; Andrew Church; Robert Fish; Sue Ranger; Jasper O. Kenter


Ecosystem services | 2016

Aesthetic and spiritual values of ecosystems: recognising the ontological and axiological plurality of cultural ecosystem 'services'.

Nigel Cooper; Emily Brady; Helen Steen; Rosalind Bryce


Ecosystem services | 2016

The impact of information, value-deliberation and group-based decision-making on values for ecosystem services: Integrating deliberative monetary valuation and storytelling

Jasper O. Kenter; Niels Jobstvogt; Verity Watson; Katherine N. Irvine; Michael Christie; Rosalind Bryce


Archive | 2014

UK National Ecosystem Assessment follow-on phase. Work Package Report 6: Shared, plural and cultural values of ecosystems

Jasper O. Kenter; Mark S. Reed; Katherine N. Irvine; L O'Brien; Emily Brady; Rosalind Bryce; Michael Christie; Andrew Church; Nigel Cooper; Althea Davies; Neal Hockley; Ioan Fazey; Niels Jobstvogt; Claire Molloy; Johanne Orchard-Webb; Neil Ravenscroft; Mandy Ryan; Verity Watson


Ecosystem services | 2016

Shared values and deliberative valuation: Future directions

Jasper O. Kenter; Rosalind Bryce; Michael Christie; Nigel Cooper; Neal Hockley; Katherine N. Irvine; Ioan Fazey; Liz O’Brien; Johanne Orchard-Webb; Neil Ravenscroft; Christopher M. Raymond; Mark S. Reed; Paul Tett; Verity Watson


Ecosystem services | 2016

Forming shared values in conservation management: An interpretive-deliberative-democratic approach to including community voices

Susan Ranger; Jasper O. Kenter; Rosalind Bryce; G. Cumming; T. Dapling; E. Lawes; P.B. Richardson

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Jasper O. Kenter

Scottish Association for Marine Science

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Althea Davies

University of St Andrews

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Nigel Cooper

Anglia Ruskin University

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Emily Brady

University of Edinburgh

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