-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
- Elaine green on Data incoming from Kenya!
- Judith Lock on Bonjour de la Tunisie! (Part One)
- Alex Hogg on Bonjour de la Tunisie! (Part One)
- Dr.H.K.Ramaraju on MRes Wildlife Conservation 2015 – Here We Go!
- Judith Lock on Putting the ‘Res’ in ‘MRes’!
Archives
- July 2018
- May 2018
- December 2017
- November 2017
- October 2017
- August 2017
- November 2016
- October 2016
- August 2016
- July 2016
- April 2016
- March 2016
- February 2016
- December 2015
- October 2015
- August 2015
- July 2015
- June 2015
- February 2015
- December 2014
- November 2014
- October 2014
- June 2014
- May 2014
- April 2014
- January 2014
- December 2013
Categories
Meta
Uncategorized
November 22, 2017
Jo’s project – Ecosystem impacts of pika management
Hi everyone! It is time for my final blog post, which means the year has come to an end and I have finally finished my research project! Whilst there were challenges along the way, the experiences, particularly those from the data collection period, were fantastic and I wouldn’t have wanted to miss one second of […]
Posted By : Aggie ThompsonAugust 31, 2017
Kenya Field Course 2016
Back in November, the five of us visited Kenya for the MRes field course. The aim of the trip was to study a number of field techniques and compare the different conservation management strategies used at two conservancies, Lewa Wildlife Conservancy and Westgate Community Conservancy. First, we visited Lewa Wildlife Conservancy where we stayed for […]
Posted By : Danielle FreeNovember 15, 2016
Welcome MRes Wildlife Conservation Cohort 2016/17!
Aggie Thompson, 22 Background: I graduated from the University of Southampton in 2015 with BSc Zoology, specialising in ecology, behaviour and conservation. During the summer of 2015, I conducted a study on the impact of new artificial lighting systems on bat activity on Southampton Common as part of an internship for Southampton City Council. I […]
Posted By : Danielle FreeOctober 16, 2016
Goodbye and good luck MRes cohort 2015-16!
The last few months have been very busy for our MRes Wildlife Conservation students, with the end of one academic year followed almost immediately by the start of the next! The 2015-16 cohort of students rounded off the course at the end of September with their research presentations and vivas. It was a very […]
Posted By : Danielle FreeAugust 12, 2016
Distribution of large herbivores in Matobo National Park, Zimbabwe
Written by Alex Phillips It’s now been almost a month since fellow MRes student Tessa and I returned from Zimbabwe; where we split our time between the Dambari Wildlife Trust and the beautiful Matobo National Park that is part of the Matobo Hills World Heritage Site. Though it was odd to be apart and back […]
Posted By : Danielle FreeAugust 4, 2016
Spotted hyenas and lions in northern Kenya
Written by Arjun Dheer My fieldwork in Kenya has come and gone in the blink of an eye! I’ve now been back in the UK for almost 3 months, but my arrival in Kenya back on February 22nd, feels like yesterday! My project focuses on dietary and spatiotemporal resource partitioning between the two apex predators in […]
Posted By : Danielle FreeJuly 6, 2016
Large grazers in the Matobo National Park
Written by Tessa Chesonis After a couple of months of preparation in the UK, fellow MRes student Alex and I made our way to Zimbabwe to start collecting data for our projects. We’ve now been here for six weeks, staying with the Dambari Wildlife Trust and spending most of our time in the wonderful Matobo […]
Posted By : Danielle FreeJuly 1, 2016
Barn owl conservation in the South Downs National Park
Written by Flávia C. B. Trigo With just a few months to go until we finish the MRes Wildlife Conservation course, it is unbelievable how fast time is passing by! Some of our fellows are still out conducting fieldwork in Zimbabwe, while the students who went out to Kenya are back and getting stuck into […]
Posted By : Danielle FreeApril 29, 2016
An update from Kenya: managing grassland for grazers
As the end of our fieldwork approaches, those of us here in Kenya are a little amazed at how fast the time has flown! After 10 weeks here at Lewa Wildlife Conservancy we are now wrapping up our data collection ready to return to the UK. My project focuses on investigating the grassland management techniques […]
Posted By : Danielle FreeApril 6, 2016
Data incoming from Kenya!
By Sian Green… It is hard to believe that I am almost halfway through the fieldwork phase of my project already, after arriving in Kenya with fellow MRes student Rebecca in early March! Having already spent some time at the Marwell Wildlife camp in Lewa Wildlife Conservancy as part of our field trip last year, it took only […]
Posted By : Danielle Free