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Jesse F. Abrams

Researcher at University of Exeter

Publications -  28
Citations -  697

Jesse F. Abrams is an academic researcher from University of Exeter. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biodiversity & Occupancy. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 28 publications receiving 336 citations. Previous affiliations of Jesse F. Abrams include Leibniz Association & Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Ecology.

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The environmental impacts of palm oil in context

TL;DR: The Review highlights that although substantial gaps remain in understanding of the relationship between the environmental, socio-cultural and economic impacts of oil palm, and the scope, stringency and effectiveness of initiatives to address these, there has been little research into the impacts and trade-offs of other vegetable oil crops.
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Geoengineering impact of open ocean dissolution of olivine on atmospheric CO 2 , surface ocean pH and marine biology

TL;DR: In this paper, the intended and unintended effects of one specific geoengineering approach, which is enhanced weathering via the open ocean dissolution of the silicate-containing mineral olivine, are analyzed.
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Identifying a Safe and Just Corridor for People and the Planet

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe a framework that the recently formed Earth Commission will use to define and quantify target ranges for a "safe and just corridor" that meets these goals.
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The long-term legacy of plastic mass production

TL;DR: The amount of plastic in the global surface ocean is estimated, the long-term legacy of plastic mass production is assessed, the time required to clean up the oceans with river barriers and clean up devices, and the fate of collected plastic waste is explored.
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Shifting up a gear with iDNA: From mammal detection events to standardised surveys

TL;DR: An approach to analyse detection records of mammals derived from leech samples using an occupancy framework that accounts for leech-specific factors influencing the detection probability is described, which leads to increased confidence in occupancy estimates.