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Volker C. Radeloff

Researcher at University of Wisconsin-Madison

Publications -  347
Citations -  22574

Volker C. Radeloff is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin-Madison. The author has contributed to research in topics: Species richness & Land use, land-use change and forestry. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 317 publications receiving 18345 citations. Previous affiliations of Volker C. Radeloff include Amherst College.

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Characterizing global patterns of frozen ground with and without snow cover using microwave and MODIS satellite data products

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed two remote sensing datasets: the MODIS Snow Cover product and the NASA MEaSUREs Global Record of Daily Landscape Freeze/Thaw Status dataset derived from SSM/I and SSMIS.
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Self-perpetuating ecological–evolutionary dynamics in an agricultural host–parasite system

TL;DR: Evidence is document of ecological–evolutionary feedbacks between aphids and parasitoids through resistance conferred by heritable bacterial symbionts through variation in selection that prevents traits from becoming fixed.
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Refugee species: which historic baseline should inform conservation planning?

TL;DR: Cromsigt et al. as discussed by the authors found no evidence for the claim that human pressure prior to 8000 BP determined where bison occurred, and they concluded that there is no evidence that bison were already 8000 years ago a refugee species.
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Lakeshore zoning has heterogeneous ecological effects: an application of a coupled economic-ecological model

TL;DR: This paper examined whether minimum frontage zoning policies have made a positive impact on the lakes they were aimed to protect in Vilas County, Wisconsin, and suggested that zoning regimes with a higher minimum shoreline frontage are likely to have larger ecological effects when applied to lakes that are less developed.
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Recovery and adaptation after wildfire on the Colorado Front Range (2010-12)

TL;DR: This article studied three wildfires on the Colorado Front Range from 2010 to 2012 that each destroyed over 150 homes, describing policy response and characterising the built environment after wildfire, and found some adaptation, through better-mitigated homes and stronger building and vegetation mitigation standards, but also extensive reinvestment in hazard-prone environments, with governmental support.