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Rebecca Chaplin-Kramer

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  84
Citations -  6966

Rebecca Chaplin-Kramer is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ecosystem services & Biodiversity. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 70 publications receiving 4741 citations. Previous affiliations of Rebecca Chaplin-Kramer include University of California, Berkeley & University of Minnesota.

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Can integrating wildlife and livestock enhance ecosystem services in central Kenya

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a savanna ecosystem in central Kenya where wildlife and livestock exhibit a suite of potential positive interactions, such as treating livestock with acaricide offers the unintended benefit of removing ticks from the landscape, a result that has been shown to occur at both large and small scales.
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Landscape simplification increases vineyard pest outbreaks and insecticide use

TL;DR: Using a 13‐year government database to analyse landscape effects on European grapevine moth outbreaks and insecticides across c.
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Greenhouse gas footprints of palm oil production in Indonesia over space and time

TL;DR: The fine-scale analysis provides a spatial screening approach to inform new oil palm concessions and sourcing decisions, before more cost-intensive patch analysis and carbon stock assessments are conducted.
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Landscape configuration is the primary driver of impacts on water quality associated with agricultural expansion

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a spatially explicit approach and modeled a hypothetical corporate supply chain decision representing contrasting patterns of land-use change in four regions of the globe, and found two to fivefold differences in sediment export for the same amount of habitat conversion within regions characterized by similar physical traits.
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Sensitivity analysis of a sediment dynamics model applied in a Mediterranean river basin: Global change and management implications

TL;DR: A sensitivity analysis of the InVEST sediment retention model identified the model parameters related to the natural environment as the most influential for sediment export and retention, demonstrating the sensitivity of these dynamics to climate change in Mediterranean basins.