Lucy J. Mitchell
University of York
5 Papers
Lucy J. Mitchell is an academic researcher from University of York. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Global warming. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Anthropogenic environmental drivers of antimicrobial resistance in wildlife
Benjamin M. C. Swift,Malcolm J. Bennett,Katie Waller,Christine E. R. Dodd,Annie Murray,Rachel L. Gomes,Bethan Humphreys,Jon L. Hobman,Michael Jones,Sophia E. Whitlock,Lucy J. Mitchell,Rosie J. Lennon,Kathryn E. Arnold +12 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that AMR in commensal bacteria of wildlife is not driven simply by anthropogenic factors, and, in practical terms, this may limit the utility of wildlife as sentinels of spatial variation in the transmission of environmental AMR.
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The trade-off between fix rate and tracking duration on estimates of home range size and habitat selection for small vertebrates.
TL;DR: To reduce skew and bias in home range size estimation and especially habitat selection caused by individual variation and estimation method, it is recommended tracking animals for the longest period possible even if this results in a reduced fix rate.
The Impact of Peatland Restoration on Local Climate: Restoration of a Cool Humid Island
Fred Worrall,Ian Boothroyd,Rosie L. Gardner,Nicholas J K Howden,Tim Burt,Richard P. Smith,Lucy J. Mitchell,Tim Kohler,Ruth Gregg +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used satellite land surface temperature data across 49, one km2 grid squares with 20 on peatland and 29 on surrounding agricultural land on mineral soils from 2000 to 2017.
The Yellow-browed Warbler (Phylloscopus inornatus) as a model to understand vagrancy and its potential for the evolution of new migration routes
Paul Dufour,Susanne Åkesson,Magnus Hellström,Chris M. Hewson,S. Lagerveld,Lucy J. Mitchell,Nikita Chernetsov,Heiko Schmaljohann,Pierre-André Crochet +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the Yellow-browed Warbler (Phylloscopus inornatus) is used as a case study for studying the links between vagrancy and the emergence of new migratory routes.
High interindividual variability in habitat selection and functional habitat relationships in European nightjars over a period of habitat change
TL;DR: The results highlight that using individual resource selection and specialization measures, in conjunction with functional responses to change, can lead to better understanding of the needs of a population.