D
David E. Smith
Researcher at University of Virginia
Publications - 9
Citations - 1691
David E. Smith is an academic researcher from University of Virginia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Marine biology & Brackish marsh. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 9 publications receiving 1468 citations.
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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.
Supporting Online Material for The Status of the World's Land and Marine Mammals: Diversity, Threat, and Knowledge
Jan Schipper,Janice Chanson,Federica Chiozza,Neil A. Cox,Michael R. Hoffmann,Vineet Katariya,John F. Lamoreux,Ana S. L. Rodrigues,Simon N. Stuart,Jonathan E. M. Baillie,Luigi Boitani,Thomas E. Lacher,Russell A. Mittermeier,Andrew T. Smith,Daniel Absolon,John M. Aguiar,Giovanni Amori,Noura Bakkour,Ricardo Baldi,Richard J. Berridge,Jon Bielby,Julian Blanc,Thomas M. Brooks,James Burton,Thomas M. Butynski,Gianluca Catullo,Zoe Cokeliss,Ben Collen,Jim Conroy,Justin Cooke,Andrew E. Derocher,Holly T. Dublin,J. W. Duckworth,Louise H. Emmons,Richard H. Emslie,Marco Festa-Bianchet,Matthew N. Foster,Sabrina Foster,L David,C. Cormack Gates,Mariano Gimenez-Dixon,Susana González,Tatjana C. Good,Geoffrey Hammerson,Philip S. Hammond,Meredith Happold,John Hare,Richard B. Harris,Clare E. Hawkins,Lawrence R. Heaney,Simon Hedges,Kristofer M. Helgen,Craig Hilton,Syed Ainul Hussain,Nobuo Ishii,Thomas Jefferson,Richard K. B. Jenkins,Charlotte H. Johnston,Mark Keith,Jonathan Kingdon,David Knox,Kit M. Kovacs,Penny F. Langhammer,Kristin Leus,Rebecca L. Lewison,Gabriela Lichtenstein,Zoe Macavoy,Georgina M. Mace,David Mallon,Monica Masi,Rodrigo A. Medellín,Patricia Medici,G. Mills,Patricia D. Moehlman,Sanjay Molur,Kristin Nowell,John F. Oates,Wanda Olech,Monik Oprea,Bruce D. Patterson,William F. Perrin,Beth Polidoro,Abigail Powel,Yelizaveta Protas,Paul A. Racey,Jim Ragle,Pavithra Ramani,Galen B. Rathbun,Randall R. Reeves,Stephen B. Reilly,John E. Reynolds,Ruth Grace Rosell-Ambal,Monica Rulli,Anthony B. Rylands,Cody J. Schank,Wes Sechrest,Caryn Self-Sullivan,Alan Shoemaker,David E. Smith,J Peter,Barbara L. Taylor,Rob Timmins,Diego G. Tirira,Marcelo F. Tognelli,Katerina Tsytsulina,Liza M. Veiga,Christophe Vié,Elizabeth A. Williamson,Sarah A. Wyatt,Yan Xie,Bruce E. Young +110 more
TL;DR: A comprehensive assessment of the conservation status and distribution of the world's mammals is presented, compiled by 1700+ experts, to suggest common mechanisms driving diversity and endemism across systems.
Journal ArticleDOI
Sampling bias of minnow traps in shallow aquatic habitats on the Eastern Shore of Virginia
TL;DR: Sampling biases of minnow traps in shallow, estuarine locations on the Eastern Shore of Virginia, USA demonstrated bias toward collection of a common marsh resident, the mummichog Fundulus heteroclitus, and bias against collection of several other resident species and juveniles ofEstuarine transient species.
Journal ArticleDOI
Composition and abundance of resident marsh-surface nekton: comparison between tidal freshwater and salt marshes in Virginia, USA
David J. Yozzo,David E. Smith +1 more
TL;DR: The daggerblade grass shrimp shrimp Palaemonetes pugio was the dominant nekton species collected at salt marsh sites, and was seasonallyabundant on tidal freshwater marshes, and a positive correlation between flooding depth and neKton abundance was observed on salt marshes.
A practical approach to the complex problem of environmental sustainability: The UVa Bay Game
TL;DR: In this article, an agent-based simulation game of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed was developed to better understand the environmental sustainability problems in the United States and to provide an experimental platform to advance the understanding of environmental sustainability in the university classroom as well as to enable policy-makers to discover the unpredictable and often emergent consequences of their decision-making.