brown bear

Maëlis Kervellec's first PhD paper!

Check it out, this is a cool ++++ paper by @MaelisKervellec 🤩🤩 So glad for her that she got her first PhD paper published #OpenAccess @OFBiodiversite @CNRS_OccitaniE @INEE_CNRS @umontpellier @twitthair1 @cefemontpellier https://t.

Brown bear abundance in the Pyrenees mountains

So proud of our latest paper on estimating abundance of Brown bear in the Pyrenees 🐻📈 in @PeerComJournal led by C Vanpé 😇https://t.co/aBZtWmO1UW Yet another example of our collaboration w/ @OFBiodiversite 🤩

New paper: Identifying priority conservation areas for a recovering brown bear population in Greece using citizen science data

🥳🍾 Awesome work by AS Bonnet Lebrun, A Karamanlidis from @Arcturosgr M de Gabriel Hernando and I Renner @MoonbeamLevels in which we use Poisson point process models to identify priority conservation areas for brown bears in Greece 🇬🇷🐻📈 https://t.

New preprint!

Check out our new preprint by awesome Anne-Sophie Bonnet-Lebrun "Identifying priority conservation areas for recovering large #carnivores using #citizenscience data" w/ 🐟 point-process models to map 🇬🇷 🐻 distribution https://t.co/CEUbVKuXRQ starring @Arcturosgr @MoonbeamLevels pic.

Blaise defended his PhD on a socio-ecological approach to Brown bear management in the Pyrenees

Blaise defended his PhD I co-supervised with Pierre-Yves Quenette from ONCFS (manuscript here). Blaise studied the attitudes of the public toward brown bear presence and provided sound estimates of abundance and distribution for the species in the Pyrenees.

Focus on two Brown bear papers

Among the papers we published lately, I’d like to emphasize two contributions on the conservation of brown bears with some eminent colleagues: Karamanlidis, A.A., M. de Gabriel Hernando, L. Krambokoukis, O.

Studying attitudes towards large carnivores

Sending questionnaires for Blaise’s PhD to study the local perception of the presence of brown bears in the Pyrénées. First picture, the 3000 questionnaires to be sent; second picture, those questionnaires once packed in boxes; third picture, the nice guy from the mail company La Poste comes and picks them up.