Publications
Journal Articles
A list of journal articles published by CSIS members, including 3 cover stories in Nature, 24 appearances in Science, and 17 in PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America).
Books and Book Chapters
Selected books (edited books) and book chapters published by CSIS members.
Publications
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Information Flow in Fisheries Management: Systemic Distortion within Agency Hierarchies
Published on July 17, 2014
The early to mid-1970s provided some of the best Coho Salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) fishing of the last century in Oregon, in large part a function of productive ocean conditions and a booming hatchery system. -
Synthesis in land change science: methodological patterns, challenges, and guidelines
Published on July 9, 2014
To understand the causes and consequences of these changes, land change science (LCS) draws on a wide array synthetic and meta- study techniques to generate global and regional knowl- edge from local case studies of land change. -
Protecting Lemurs: Madagascar's Forests
Published on May 20, 2014
In their policy forum "Averting Lemur Extinctions Amid Madagascar's Political Crisis" (21 February, p. 842), C. Schwitzer and colleagues make an impassioned pleas for emergency action to save Madagascar's lemurs. -
RETHINKING GLOBAL LAND USE (BOOK CHAPTER) -- Applications of the Telecoupling Framework to Land-Change Science
Published on April 22, 2014
Over the past two decades, progress has been made in understanding and predicting land-use change in specifi c places, using frameworks such as coupled human-natural systems, coupled human-environmental systems, or coupled social-ecological systems -
RETHINKING GLOBAL LAND USE IN AN URBAN ERA - Significance of Telecoupling for Exploration of Land-Use Change
Published on April 22, 2014
Land systems are increasingly infl uenced by distal connections: the externalities and unintended consequences of social and ecological processes which occur in distant locations -
Deforestation in Madagascar: Debates over the island's forest cover and challenges of measuring forest change
Published on March 20, 2014
This chapter investigates measurements of forest cover and its change on the island, and focuses attention on the technical challenges and social context of that scientific effort. -
Morphology and life history of the Great Slave Lake ciscoes (Salmoniformes: Coregoninae)
Published on March 11, 2014
The ciscoes (Salmoniformes: Coregoninae) have radiated into complexes of closely related species, life history types, and ecological variants -
Impact of Livestock on Giant Pandas and their Habitat
Published on February 27, 2014
We investigated the impact of an emerging livestock sector in China's renowned Wolong Nature Reserve for giant pandas. -
Natural recovery and restoration in giant panda habitat after the Wenchuan earthquake
Published on February 24, 2014
Natural disasters affect forest ecosystems in profound and complex ways. -
A meta-analysis investigation of the direction of the energy-GDP causal relationship: implications for the growth-degrowth dialogue
Published on February 20, 2014
The present study traces the implications of the Energy-GDP causality dialogue for the context of the growth-degrowth debate, where the energy-development link plays a decisive role -
Predation by alewife on lake trout fry emerging from laboratory reefs: Estimation of fry survival and assessment of predation potential
Published on February 18, 2014
This study tested the prediction that fry showing typical swimming and avoidance behavior over artificial reefs will differ in survival when alewives are present versus when alewives are absent. -
POPULATION AND ENVIRONMENT - Longterm dynamics of household size and their environmental implications
Published on February 11, 2014
Little is known about the environmental implications of long-term historical trends in household size -
Assessing the Effectiveness of Payments for Ecosystem Services: an Agent-Based Modeling Approach
Published on January 31, 2014
To assess the impacts of these interactions on the effectiveness of PES programs, we developed a spatially explicit agent-based model: human and natural interactions under policies (HANIP). -
Evaluating Conservation Effectiveness of Nature Reserves Established for Surrogate Species: Case of a Giant Panda Nature Reserve in Qinling Mountains, China
Published on January 13, 2014
Many nature reserves are established to protect the habitat needs of particular endangered species of interest but their effectiveness for protecting other species is questionable. -
ASIA AND THE PACIFIC POLICY STUDIES -- Forest Sustainability in China and Implications for a Telecoupled World
Published on December 19, 2013
Using the framework of telecoupling we found that China’s forest cover increase is affected by multiple telecoupling processes and their interactions with each other and with other factors. -
The Housing Bomb: Why Our Addiction to Houses Is Destroying the Environment and Threatening Our Society
Published on November 15, 2013
Explaining how and why our growing addiction to houses has taken the humble American dream and twisted it into an environmental and societal nightmare. -
Operationalizing sustainability in urban coastal systems: A system dynamics analysis
Published on November 12, 2013
We propose a system dynamics approach for Ecologically Sustainable Development (ESD) in urban coastal systems -
Assessing spatiotemporal changes in tiger habitat across different land management regimes
Published on October 18, 2013
Human-induced habitat loss and degradation are increasing the extinction probability of many wildlife species worldwide, thus protecting habitat is crucial. -
Traits associated with drought survival in three Australian tropical rainforest seedlings
Published on October 4, 2013
Drought affects the distribution of plant species in tropical forests and will likely increase under climate change. -
An assessment of invasion risk from assisted migration
Published on October 4, 2013
To reduce the risk of extinction due to climate change, some ecologists have suggested human-aided translocation of species, or assisted migration (AM), to areas where climate is projected to become suitable.