scispace - formally typeset
B

Benjamin Zuckerberg

Researcher at University of Wisconsin-Madison

Publications -  134
Citations -  4900

Benjamin Zuckerberg is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin-Madison. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Population. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 112 publications receiving 3775 citations. Previous affiliations of Benjamin Zuckerberg include State University of New York System & State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Citizen Science as an Ecological Research Tool: Challenges and Benefits

TL;DR: Citizen science, the involvement of volunteers in research, has increased the scale of ecological field studies with continent-wide, centralized monitoring efforts and tapping of volunteers to conduct large, coordinated, field experiments as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Poleward shifts in breeding bird distributions in New York State.

TL;DR: This article used the New York State Breeding Bird Atlas, a statewide survey of 5332 25 km2 blocks surveyed in 1980-1985 and 2000-2005, to test several predictions that the birds of New York state are responding to climate change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatiotemporal exploratory models for broad-scale survey data

TL;DR: A semiparametric model that provides a flexible framework for analyzing dynamic patterns of species occurrence and abundance from broad-scale survey data and demonstrates that monthly changes in distribution of a migratory species can be more accurately described with a STEM than a conventional bagged decision tree model.
Journal ArticleDOI

The subnivium: a deteriorating seasonal refugium

TL;DR: For many terrestrial organisms in the Northern Hemisphere, winter is a period of resource scarcity and energy deficits, survivable only because a seasonal refugium exists beneath the snow.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Invisible Prevalence of Citizen Science in Global Research: Migratory Birds and Climate Change

TL;DR: The contribution of citizen science to a review paper by ornithologists in which they formulated ten central claims about the impact of climate change on avian migration is examined, with no evidence of a mistrust of claims that relied heavily on citizen-science data.