David S. Shiffman
Arizona State University
53 Papers
43 Citations
David S. Shiffman is an academic researcher from Arizona State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fisheries management & Fishing. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 46 publications. Previous affiliations of David S. Shiffman include University of Miami & Silver Spring Networks.
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Papers
How Are Scientists Using Social Media in the Workplace
TL;DR: This study investigates how a surveyed sample of 587 scientists from a variety of academic disciplines, but predominantly the academic life sciences, use social media to communicate internally and externally, and provides a baseline from which to assess future trends in social media use within the science academy.
A global perspective on the trophic geography of sharks
Christopher S. Bird,Christopher S. Bird,Ana Veríssimo,Sarah Magozzi,Kátya G. Abrantes,Alex Aguilar,Hassan A. Al-Reasi,Adam Barnett,Dana M. Bethea,Gérard Biais,Asunción Borrell,Marc Bouchoucha,Mariah Boyle,Edward J. Brooks,Juerg M. Brunnschweiler,Paco Bustamante,Aaron B. Carlisle,Diana Catarino,Stéphane Caut,Yves Cherel,Tiphaine Chouvelon,Diana A. Churchill,Javier Ciancio,Julien Claes,Ana Colaço,Dean L. Courtney,Dean L. Courtney,Pierre Cresson,Ryan Daly,Leigh de Necker,Tetsuya Endo,Ivone Figueiredo,Ashley J. Frisch,Joan Holst Hansen,Michael R. Heithaus,Nigel E. Hussey,Johannes A. Iitembu,Francis Juanes,Michael J. Kinney,Jeremy J. Kiszka,Sebastian A. Klarian,Dorothée Kopp,Robert T. Leaf,Yunkai Li,Anne Lorrain,Daniel J. Madigan,Aleksandra Maljković,Luis Malpica-Cruz,Philip Matich,Philip Matich,Mark G. Meekan,Frédéric Ménard,Gui M. Menezes,Samantha E. M. Munroe,Michael C. Newman,Yannis P. Papastamatiou,Yannis P. Papastamatiou,Heidi Pethybridge,Jeffrey D. Plumlee,Jeffrey D. Plumlee,Carlos Polo-Silva,Katie Quaeck-Davies,Vincent Raoult,Jonathan C. P. Reum,Yassir Eden Torres-Rojas,David S. Shiffman,Oliver N. Shipley,Conrad W. Speed,Michelle D. Staudinger,Amy K. Teffer,Alexander Tilley,Maria Valls,Jeremy J. Vaudo,Tak Cheung Wai,R. J. David Wells,R. J. David Wells,Alex S. J. Wyatt,Andrew Yool,Clive N. Trueman +78 more
TL;DR: It is shown that populations of shelf-dwelling sharks derive a substantial proportion of their carbon from regional pelagic sources, but contain individuals that forage within additional isotopically diverse local food webs, such as those supported by terrestrial plant sources, benthic production and macrophytes.
Conservation potential of apex predator tourism
Catherine Macdonald,Austin J. Gallagher,Austin J. Gallagher,Adam Barnett,Juerg M. Brunnschweiler,David S. Shiffman,Neil Hammerschlag +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated the potential benefits and conservation challenges associated with predator tourism and found that tourism is most likely to support predator conservation and/or recovery when the industry has both public and political support and under conditions of effective regulation focused on management, monitoring and enforcement by local, national and international bodies.
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Increased Abundance and Nursery Habitat Use of the Bull Shark (Carcharhinus leucas) in Response to a Changing Environment in a Warm-Temperate Estuary.
TL;DR: Evidence is shown for nursery range expansion into Pamlico Sound, North Carolina by a marine apex predator, the Bull Shark, which will have unknown, but potentially strong, impacts on both the local ecosystem and interactions with humans.
Twitter as a tool for conservation education and outreach: what scientific conferences can do to promote live-tweeting
TL;DR: In this article, the use of Twitter to share important conservation information from scientific conferences with the interested public is discussed, and strategies to promote live-tweeting of scientific conferences are introduced.
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