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Chelmala Srinivasulu
Researcher at Osmania University
Publications - 95
Citations - 2075
Chelmala Srinivasulu is an academic researcher from Osmania University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Human echolocation. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 91 publications receiving 1848 citations. Previous affiliations of Chelmala Srinivasulu include American Museum of Natural History.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
The status of the world's land and marine mammals: diversity, threat, and knowledge
Jan Schipper,Jan Schipper,Janice Chanson,Janice Chanson,Federica Chiozza,Neil A. Cox,Neil A. Cox,Michael R. Hoffmann,Michael R. Hoffmann,Vineet Katariya,John F. Lamoreux,John F. Lamoreux,Ana S. L. Rodrigues,Ana S. L. Rodrigues,Simon N. Stuart,Simon N. Stuart,Helen J. Temple,Jonathan E. M. Baillie,Luigi Boitani,Thomas E. Lacher,Thomas E. Lacher,Russell A. Mittermeier,Andrew T. Smith,Daniel Absolon,John M. Aguiar,John M. Aguiar,Giovanni Amori,Noura Bakkour,Noura Bakkour,Ricardo Baldi,Ricardo Baldi,Richard J. Berridge,Jon Bielby,Jon Bielby,Patricia Ann Black,Julian Blanc,Thomas M. Brooks,Thomas M. Brooks,Thomas M. Brooks,James Burton,James Burton,Thomas M. Butynski,Gianluca Catullo,Roselle Chapman,Zoe Cokeliss,Ben Collen,Jim Conroy,Justin Cooke,Gustavo A. B. da Fonseca,Gustavo A. B. da Fonseca,Andrew E. Derocher,Holly T. Dublin,J. W. Duckworth,Louise H. Emmons,Richard H. Emslie,Marco Festa-Bianchet,Matthew N. Foster,Sabrina Foster,David L. Garshelis,C. Cormack Gates,Mariano Gimenez-Dixon,Susana González,José F. González-Maya,Tatjana C. Good,Geoffrey Hammerson,Philip S. Hammond,D. C. D. Happold,Meredith Happold,John Hare,Richard B. Harris,Clare E. Hawkins,Clare E. Hawkins,Mandy Haywood,Lawrence R. Heaney,Simon Hedges,Kristofer M. Helgen,Craig Hilton-Taylor,Syed Ainul Hussain,Nobuo Ishii,Thomas Jefferson,Richard K. B. Jenkins,Charlotte H. Johnston,Mark Keith,Jonathan Kingdon,David Knox,Kit M. Kovacs,Kit M. Kovacs,Penny F. Langhammer,Kristin Leus,Rebecca L. Lewison,Gabriela Lichtenstein,Lloyd F. Lowry,Zoe Macavoy,Georgina M. Mace,David Mallon,Monica Masi,Meghan W. McKnight,Rodrigo A. Medellín,Patricia Medici,G. Mills,Patricia D. Moehlman,Sanjay Molur,Arturo Mora,Kristin Nowell,John F. Oates,Wanda Olech,William R.L. Oliver,Monik Oprea,Bruce D. Patterson,William F. Perrin,Beth Polidoro,Caroline M. Pollock,Abigail Powel,Yelizaveta Protas,Paul A. Racey,Jim Ragle,Pavithra Ramani,Galen B. Rathbun,Randall R. Reeves,Stephen B. Reilly,John E. Reynolds,Carlo Rondinini,Ruth Grace Rosell-Ambal,Monica Rulli,Anthony B. Rylands,Simona Savini,Cody J. Schank,Wes Sechrest,Caryn Self-Sullivan,Alan Shoemaker,Claudio Sillero-Zubiri,Naamal De Silva,David E. Smith,Chelmala Srinivasulu,P. J. Stephenson,Nico van Strien,Bibhab Kumar Talukdar,Barbara L. Taylor,Rob Timmins,Diego G. Tirira,Marcelo F. Tognelli,Marcelo F. Tognelli,Katerina Tsytsulina,Liza M. Veiga,Jean-Christophe Vié,Elizabeth A. Williamson,Sarah A. Wyatt,Yan Xie,Bruce E. Young +148 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a comprehensive assessment of the conservation status and distribution of the world's mammals, including marine mammals, using data collected by 1700+ experts, covering all 5487 species.
Journal ArticleDOI
A key to the bats (Mammalia: Chiroptera) of South Asia
TL;DR: A checklist and dichotomous key to 128 species of bats known from South Asia including Afghanistan, India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Maldives is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI
Prey selection by the Indian tiger (Panthera tigris tigris) in Nagarjunasagar Srisailam Tiger Reserve, India
TL;DR: This study suggests that in tropical dry deciduous forests with low natural prey density, smaller prey species, and high livestock biomass, tigers preferentially kill smaller prey and generally avoid livestock predation.
Book
South Asian Mammals: Their Diversity, Distribution, and Status
TL;DR: This book discusses Mammological studies in South Asia, recent phylogenetic changes, and the status of Mammals of South Asia on the Red List.
The Herpetofauna of Nallamala Hills, Eastern Ghats, India: An Annotated Checklist, With Remarks on Nomenclature, Taxonomy, Habitat Use, Adaptive Types and Biogeography
TL;DR: An inventory of the herpetofauna of the Nallamala Hills, Eastern Ghats, south-eastern India finds 20 species of amphibians belonging to 14 genera in six families and 64 species of reptiles belonging to 42 generA in 15 families.