Amy Dickman
#98,217
Most Influential Person Now
Wildlife conservationist
Amy Dickman's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Amy Dickmanbiology Degrees
Biology
#7245
World Rank
#10138
Historical Rank
Ecology
#585
World Rank
#640
Historical Rank
Download Badge
Biology
Amy Dickman's Degrees
- PhD Zoology University of Oxford
- Bachelors Biological Sciences University of Oxford
Why Is Amy Dickman Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Amelia Jane Dickman is Professor of Wildlife Conservation and Director of WildCRU at the University of Oxford, Kaplan Senior Research Fellow at Pembroke College, Oxford and joint CEO of Lion Landscapes. She is best known for her leadership of the Ruaha Carnivore Project, seeking to improve conservation outcomes for lions and other carnivores in the Ruaha National Park of Tanzania. She is known for her views on the importance of scientific and local community input into discussions around the continued importance of trophy hunting for the conservation of African landscapes.
Amy Dickman's Published Works
Published Works
- A review of financial instruments to pay for predator conservation and encourage human–carnivore coexistence (2011) (375)
- The size of savannah Africa: a lion’s (Panthera leo) view (2012) (318)
- The bushmeat trade in African savannas: impacts, drivers, and possible solutions (2013) (246)
- An interdisciplinary review of current and future approaches to improving human–predator relations (2017) (199)
- Dead or alive? Comparing costs and benefits of lethal and non-lethal human–wildlife conflict mitigation on livestock farms (2014) (171)
- Saving the World's Terrestrial Megafauna (2016) (169)
- Conservation inequality and the charismatic cat: Felis felicis (2015) (153)
- The global decline of cheetah Acinonyx jubatus and what it means for conservation (2016) (153)
- Don't forget to look down – collaborative approaches to predator conservation (2017) (146)
- Random versus Game Trail-Based Camera Trap Placement Strategy for Monitoring Terrestrial Mammal Communities (2015) (142)
- An analysis and review of models of the sociobiology of the Mustelidae (2000) (140)
- Conserving Africa’s wildlife and wildlands through the COVID-19 crisis and beyond (2020) (130)
- Factors affecting leopard (Panthera pardus) spatial ecology, with particular reference to Namibian farmlands : research article (2005) (117)
- Perceived Effectiveness of Livestock-Guarding Dogs Placed on Namibian Farms (2005) (107)
- Beyond banning wildlife trade: COVID-19, conservation and development (2020) (105)
- The performance of African protected areas for lions and their prey (2017) (101)
- More than $1 billion needed annually to secure Africa’s protected areas with lions (2018) (100)
- The human dimension in addressing conflict with large carnivores (2013) (96)
- Carnivores, culture and ‘contagious conflict’: Multiple factors influence perceived problems with carnivores in Tanzania’s Ruaha landscape (2014) (95)
- Quantifying prey preferences of free-ranging Namibian cheetahs : research article (2003) (92)
- Spatial ecology of cheetahs on north-central Namibian farmlands (2008) (91)
- Applying a random encounter model to estimate lion density from camera traps in Serengeti National Park, Tanzania (2015) (90)
- Aspects of the management of cheetahs, Acinonyx jubatus jubatus, trapped on Namibian farmlands (2003) (81)
- Conserving large populations of lions - the argument for fences has holes. (2013) (81)
- Developing fencing policies for dryland ecosystems (2015) (75)
- Cryopreservation of spermatozoa from wild-born Namibian cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) and influence of glycerol on cryosurvival. (2006) (75)
- Money, Myths and Man-Eaters: Complexities of Human–Wildlife Conflict (2016) (71)
- Priorities for global felid conservation (2015) (70)
- Scent Lure Effect on Camera-Trap Based Leopard Density Estimates (2016) (67)
- Demography of the Namibian cheetah, Acinonyx jubatus jubatus (2003) (66)
- Relative efforts of countries to conserve world's megafauna (2017) (59)
- Identifying ambassador species for conservation marketing (2017) (56)
- MORPHOLOGY, PHYSICAL CONDITION, AND GROWTH OF THE CHEETAH (ACINONYX JUBATUS JUBATUS) (2003) (54)
- From Attitudes to Actions: Predictors of Lion Killing by Maasai Warriors (2017) (51)
- Revealing kleptoparasitic and predatory tendencies in an African mammal community using camera traps: a comparison of spatiotemporal approaches (2017) (49)
- Assessing the relative importance of landscape and husbandry factors in determining large carnivore depredation risk in Tanzania’s Ruaha landscape (2014) (47)
- Trophy hunting bans imperil biodiversity (2019) (45)
- Conserving the World's Megafauna and Biodiversity: The Fierce Urgency of Now (2017) (43)
- The moral basis for conservation: how is it affected by culture? (2015) (41)
- Conservation or the Moral High Ground: Siding with Bentham or Kant (2016) (40)
- Human Aspects of Cheetah Conservation: Lessons Learned from the Namibian Farmlands (2004) (39)
- Using Landscape and Bioclimatic Features to Predict the Distribution of Lions, Leopards and Spotted Hyaenas in Tanzania's Ruaha Landscape (2014) (39)
- From Cheetahs to Chimpanzees: A Comparative Review of the Drivers of Human-Carnivore Conflict and Human-Primate Conflict (2013) (38)
- Lions, trophy hunting and beyond: knowledge gaps and why they matter (2017) (38)
- Gene flow and population structure of a solitary top carnivore in a human-dominated landscape (2014) (37)
- Notes on the spatial ecology of caracals (Felis caracal), with particular reference to Namibian farmlands (2005) (34)
- An assessment of pastoralist attitudes and wildlife conflict in the Rungwa-Ruaha region, Tanzania, with particular reference to large carnivores (2005) (30)
- Using Livestock Guarding Dogs as a Conflict Resolution Strategy on Namibian Farms (2005) (29)
- Overcoming racism in the twin spheres of conservation science and practice (2021) (27)
- Learning from the past to prepare for the future: felids face continued threat from declining prey (2018) (25)
- Assessing the use of swing gates in game fences as a potential non-lethal predator exclusion technique (2006) (23)
- Creating Landscapes of Coexistence: Do Conservation Interventions Promote Tolerance of Lions in Human-dominated Landscapes? (2019) (23)
- Spatial variation in leopard (Panthera pardus) site use across a gradient of anthropogenic pressure in Tanzania's Ruaha landscape (2018) (21)
- Dental Anomalies and Incidence of Palatal Erosion in Namibian Cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus jubatus) (2004) (19)
- The Namibian Cheetah: Status Report (2007) (19)
- Survivorship and Causes of Mortality for Livestock-Guarding Dogs on Namibian Rangeland (2005) (18)
- Examining disease prevalence for species of conservation concern using non‐invasive spatial capture–recapture techniques (2017) (17)
- Deconstructed cat communities: Quantifying the threat to felids from prey defaunation (2017) (16)
- Consequences Matter: Compassion in Conservation Means Caring for Individuals, Populations and Species (2019) (16)
- Estimating leopard density across the highly modified human-dominated landscape of the Western Cape, South Africa (2019) (15)
- Improving the role of global conservation treaties in addressing contemporary threats to lions (2018) (15)
- The importance of tangible and intangible factors in human–carnivore coexistence (2020) (15)
- Regional variation of the manifestation, prevalence, and severity of giraffe skin disease: A review of an emerging disease in wild and captive giraffe populations (2016) (14)
- International law and lions (Panthera leo): understanding and improving the contribution of wildlife treaties to the conservation and sustainable use of an iconic carnivore (2017) (14)
- Conservation geopolitics (2018) (14)
- Who Bites the Bullet First? The Susceptibility of Leopards Panthera pardus to Trophy Hunting (2015) (12)
- Ecology of Free-Ranging Cheetahs (2018) (12)
- Threats posed to conservation by media misinformation (2020) (12)
- QUANTIFYING THE SEVERITY OF GIRAFFE SKIN DISEASE VIA PHOTOGRAMMETRY ANALYSIS OF CAMERA TRAP DATA. (2019) (11)
- Attracting investment for Africa's protected areas by creating enabling environments for collaborative management partnerships (2021) (11)
- Drivers of leopard (Panthera pardus) habitat use and relative abundance in Africa's largest transfrontier conservation area (2020) (9)
- A sideways look at conservation and consistency in tourism policy (2018) (9)
- Threat analysis for more effective lion conservation (2020) (9)
- The costs and causes of human-cheetah conflict on livestock and game farms (2018) (8)
- Rosettes, Remingtons and Reputation: Establishing Potential Determinants of Leopard (Panthera pardus) Trophy Prices Across Africa (2015) (8)
- Soap operas will not wash for wildlife (2021) (8)
- Combining biological and socio‐political criteria to set spatial conservation priorities for the endangered African wild dog (2018) (8)
- The relative effects of prey availability, anthropogenic pressure and environmental variables on lion ( Panthera leo ) site use in Tanzania's Ruaha landscape during the dry season (2020) (8)
- Factors affecting leopard ( ) spatial ecology, with particular reference to Namibian farmlands (2005) (7)
- Density responses of lesser-studied carnivores to habitat and management strategies in southern Tanzania’s Ruaha-Rungwa landscape (2020) (7)
- Leopard population density varies across habitats and management strategies in a mixed-use Tanzanian landscape (2021) (7)
- Commercially-driven lion part removal: What is the evidence from mortality records? (2020) (6)
- Temporal partitioning and spatiotemporal avoidance among large carnivores in a human-impacted African landscape (2021) (5)
- Coexistence in an African pastoral landscape: Evidence that livestock and wildlife temporally partition water resources (2021) (5)
- Disappearing spots : The global decline of cheetah and what it means for conservation (2016) (5)
- Use of Livestock Guarding Dogs to Reduce Human-Cheetah Conflict (2018) (5)
- Habitat use of and threats to African large carnivores in a mixed‐use landscape (2022) (5)
- Conserving Cheetahs Outside Protected Areas: An Example from Namibian Farmlands (2003) (5)
- Is there an elephant in the room? A response to Batavia et al (2018) (4)
- Camera trapping and spatially explicit capture–recapture for the monitoring and conservation management of lions: Insights from a globally important population in Tanzania (2021) (3)
- Intergenerational Inequity: Stealing the Joy and Benefits of Nature From Our Children (2022) (3)
- URGENT AND COMPREHENSIVE REFORM OF TROPHY HUNTING OF LIONS IS A BETTER OPTION THAN AN ENDANGERED LISTING ; A SCIENCE-BASED CONSENUS (2013) (3)
- Wars over Wildlife: Green Militarisation and Just War Theory (2020) (3)
- Examining attention given to threats to elephant conservation on social media (2022) (2)
- Towards equitable conservation: Social capital, fear and livestock loss shape perceived benefit from a protected area. (2022) (2)
- Comment on Koot et al. (2020) and Correction (2021) (2)
- Understanding the dynamics of lion attacks on humans and livestock in southern Maasailand, Kenya (2020) (2)
- Keeping hunting bans on target (2022) (2)
- Insights into the status and distribution of cheetah ( Acinonyx jubatus ) in an understudied potential stronghold in southern Tanzania (2021) (2)
- An experimental game to examine pastoralists' preferences for human–lion coexistence strategies (2022) (1)
- What is a lion worth to local people – Quantifying of the costs of living alongside a top predator (2022) (1)
- The size of savannah Africa: a lion’s (Panthera leo) view (2012) (1)
- Reported Conflict between Pastoralists and Wildlife around the Ruaha National Park, Tanzania (2006) (1)
- Trends and biases in African large carnivore population assessments: identifying priorities and opportunities from a systematic review of two decades of research (2022) (1)
- Understanding Nuanced Preferences For Carnivore Conservation: To Know Them Is Not Always To Love Them (2022) (1)
- Identifying ambassador species for conservation marketing Global Ecology and Conservation (2018) (1)
- Hunting trophy import bans proposed by the UK may be ineffective and inequitable as conservation policies in multiple social‐ecological contexts (2023) (0)
- Trophy hunting is not one big thing (2023) (0)
- The location of the Phinda Private Game Reserve (Dark grey) with camera-trap stations (black) with the adjacent Mkhuze game reserve (light grey). (2015) (0)
- History of the Cheetah–Human Relationship (2018) (0)
- Human-carnivore conflict in Tanzania: modelling the spatial distribution of lions (Panthera leo), leopards (Panthera pardus) and spotted hyaenas (Crocuta crocuta), and their attacks upon livestock, in Tanzania’s Ruaha landscape (2013) (0)
- Capture, Care, Collaring, and Collection of Biomedical Samples in Free-Ranging Cheetahs (2018) (0)
- Intangible factors matter for human-carnivore coexistence (2020) (0)
- Correction (2020) (0)
- Index‐based large carnivore population density and abundance estimates for the Ruaha‐Rungwa conservation complex in Tanzania (2022) (0)
- Random forest modelling of multi‐scale, multi‐species habitat associations within KAZA transfrontier conservation area using spoor data (2022) (0)
- Improving the role of global conservation treaties in addressing contemporary threats to lions (2018) (0)
- EVALUATING THE POTENTIAL RESILIENCE OF PIERIDAE BUTTERFLIES TO EXOTIC INVASIVE HOSTS (2013) (0)
- Conserving Cheetahs on Private Land: Using the Namibian Cheetah Acinonyx Jubatus Jubatus as a Case Study (2007) (0)
- Conserving Africa’s wildlife and wildlands through the COVID-19 crisis and beyond (2020) (0)
- Title: The relative effects of prey availability, anthropogenic pressure and 1 environmental variables on lion ( Panthera leo ) site use in Tanzania’s Ruaha landscape 2 during the dry season (2019) (0)
- Spatial co-occurrence patterns of sympatric large carnivores in a multi-use African system (2023) (0)
- Anthropogenic risk increases night‐time activities and associations in African elephants ( Loxodonta africana ) in the Ruaha‐Rungwa ecosystem, Tanzania (2022) (0)
This paper list is powered by the following services:
Other Resources About Amy Dickman
What Schools Are Affiliated With Amy Dickman?
Amy Dickman is affiliated with the following schools: