‘Diversity in Wildlife Management – Objectives & Tools’ IUGB Congress
Brussels August 2013
Subject
Wildlife management around the world can vary widely in its objectives. In different places, the same species may be considered as a pest, as game or classified as strictly protected. This depends on any interactions it has with socioeconomic activities or endangered biodiversity, any culinary value and its historical or cultural perception.
Furthermore, to achieve the same goal for the same species, a diverse array of tools are used all over the world. Whatever the objectives, scientists use various techniques to count, track, monitor, describe and analyse species; and managers use various ways to protect, control, care for or increase the population of a species.
The aim of the IUGB 2013 Congress was to examine this variation and to search for the underlying reasons.
Many existing and new topics were reviewed giving the various tools full attention. In addition to the results of each study or experience, the congress focused on the description of these tools and highlighted the most appropriate for local conditions and objectives. In other words, it took full advantage of the existing diversity in research and management practices.
Book of abstracts
- Download the book of abstracts of the IUGB 2013 Congress
- Check for some oral presentations donwloadable in pdf format
Poster Session - Belgian selection
- A method for molecular diet analysis of wild boar from their faeces
- Labelling as a tool to enhance sustainable wildlife management
- Parameterization of the population dynamics of wild boar (Sus scrofa L.) in Southern Belgium
- Aujeszky’s disease virus seroprevalence in wild boar, Southern Belgium, 2012
- Assessment and monitoring of forest-game balance: an exclosure experiment
- Bioindicators for measurement of red deer pressure on understory vegetationin temperate deciduous forests
- An ICE-based monitoring for roe deer in sympatry with red deer in Belgium
- Fine-scale analysis of ungulate-vehicle collisions in Southern Belgium
- Spatial analysis of bark-stripping damage by red deer in irregular hardwood forest
- Wild boar movement ecology: what do we (don’t) know ?
- An exclosure experiment to assess the impact of ungulateson plant diversity in Belgium