Publications
Are we eating the world's megafauna to extinction? Conservation Letters. :e12627.
.
2019. Both the largest and smallest vertebrates have elevated extinction risk. PNAS. 115(26):E5847-E5848.
.
2018. Bushmeat hunting and extinction risk to the world's mammals. The Royal Society Open Science.
.
2016. Collapse of the world's largest herbivores. Science Advances. 1(4)
.
2015. Eating plants and planting forests for the climate. Global Change Biology. 25(12):3995-3995.
.
2019. Extinction filters mediate the global effects of habitat fragmentation on animals. Science. 366:1236–1239.
.
2019. Extinction risk is most acute for the world’s largest and smallest vertebrates. PNAS. 114(40):10678–10683.
.
2017. A forest loss report card for the world’s protected areas. Nat Ecol Evol.
.
2021. Glimmers of hope in large carnivore recoveries. Scientific Reports. 12:10005.
.
2022. Global forest loss disproportionately erodes biodiversity in intact landscapes. Nature. 547:441–444.
.
2017. Global reforestation and biodiversity conservation. Conservation Biology. 34(5):1221-1228.
.
2020. The impact of thermal seasonality on terrestrial endotherm food web dynamics: a revision of the Exploitation Ecosystem Hypothesis. Ecography. 43(12):1859-1877.
.
2020. Large species within carnivora are large carnivores. Royal Society Open Science. 5:181228.
.
2018. Prey depletion as a threat to the world's large carnivores. Royal Society Open Science.
.
2016. Range contractions of the world’s large carnivores. R. Soc. open sci.. 4(170052)
.
2017. The Role of Scientists’ Warning in Shifting Policy from Growth to Conservation Economy. Bioscience. 68(4):239-240.
.
2018. Saving the World's Terrestrial Megafauna. BioScience. 66(10):807-812.
.
2016. .
2017. World Scientists’ Warning of a Climate Emergency. BioScience. 70(1):8–12.
.
2020. .
2017.