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Dive into the research topics where Soumya Prasad is active.

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Featured researches published by Soumya Prasad.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Identifying Priority Areas for Conservation and Management in Diverse Tropical Forests

Karel Mokany; David A. Westcott; Soumya Prasad; Andrew J. Ford; Daniel J. Metcalfe

The high concentration of the world’s species in tropical forests endows these systems with particular importance for retaining global biodiversity, yet it also presents significant challenges for ecology and conservation science. The vast number of rare and yet to be discovered species restricts the applicability of species-level modelling for tropical forests, while the capacity of community classification approaches to identify priorities for conservation and management is also limited. Here we assessed the degree to which macroecological modelling can overcome shortfalls in our knowledge of biodiversity in tropical forests and help identify priority areas for their conservation and management. We used 527 plant community survey plots in the Australian Wet Tropics to generate models and predictions of species richness, compositional dissimilarity, and community composition for all the 4,313 vascular plant species recorded across the region (>1.3 million communities (grid cells)). We then applied these predictions to identify areas of tropical forest likely to contain the greatest concentration of species, rare species, endemic species and primitive angiosperm families. Synthesising these alternative attributes of diversity into a single index of conservation value, we identified two areas within the Australian wet tropics that should be a high priority for future conservation actions: the Atherton Tablelands and Daintree rainforest. Our findings demonstrate the value of macroecological modelling in identifying priority areas for conservation and management actions within highly diverse systems, such as tropical forests.


Nature Communications | 2014

Loss of frugivore seed dispersal services under climate change

Karel Mokany; Soumya Prasad; David A. Westcott

The capacity of species to track shifting climates into the future will strongly influence outcomes for biodiversity under a rapidly changing climate. However, we know remarkably little about the dispersal abilities of most species and how these may be influenced by climate change. Here we show that climate change is projected to substantially reduce the seed dispersal services provided by frugivorous vertebrates in rainforests across the Australian Wet Tropics. Our model projections show reductions in both median and long-distance seed dispersal, which may markedly reduce the capacity of many rainforest plant species to track shifts in suitable habitat under climate change. However, our analyses suggest that active management to maintain the abundances of a small set of important frugivores under climate change could markedly reduce the projected loss of seed dispersal services and facilitate shifting distributions of rainforest plant species.


Biological Conservation | 2012

Seed dispersal in changing landscapes

Kim R. McConkey; Soumya Prasad; Richard T. Corlett; Ahimsa Campos-Arceiz; Jedediah F. Brodie; Haldre S. Rogers; Luis Santamaría


Conservation and Society | 2004

Assessing Ecological Sustainability of Non-Timber Forest Produce Extraction: The Indian Scenario

Ghazala Shahabuddin; Soumya Prasad


Oikos | 2010

Context-dependency of a complex fruit-frugivore mutualism: temporal variation in crop size and neighborhood effects

Soumya Prasad; Raman Sukumar


Ecological Research | 2010

Who really ate the fruit? A novel approach to camera trapping for quantifying frugivory by ruminants

Soumya Prasad; Andre Pittet; Raman Sukumar


Biotropica | 2006

Ruminant-mediated Seed Dispersal of an Economically Valuable Tree in Indian Dry Forests

Soumya Prasad; Jagdish Krishnaswamy; Ravi Chellam; Surendra Prakash Goyal


Oikos | 2013

Antelope mating strategies facilitate invasion of grasslands by a woody weed

Shivani Jadeja; Soumya Prasad; Suhel Quader; Kavita Isvaran


The Indian Forester | 2014

Addressing the management of a long-established invasive shrub: the case of Lantana camara in Indian forests.

Geetha Ramaswami; Soumya Prasad; David A. Westcott; S. P. Subuddhi; Raman Sukumar


Global Ecology and Biogeography | 2015

Impacts of climate change and management responses in tropical forests depend on complex frugivore-mediated seed dispersal

Karel Mokany; Soumya Prasad; David A. Westcott

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David A. Westcott

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Raman Sukumar

Indian Institute of Science

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Karel Mokany

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Kim R. McConkey

National Institute of Advanced Studies

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Andre Pittet

Indian Institute of Science

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Aparajita Datta

Nature Conservation Foundation

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Geetha Ramaswami

Indian Institute of Science

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Kavita Isvaran

National Centre for Biological Sciences

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Shivani Jadeja

National Centre for Biological Sciences

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Suhel Quader

National Centre for Biological Sciences

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