
Dan HerreraUniversity of Maryland, College Park | UMD, UMCP, University of Maryland College Park · Department of Environmental Science and Technology
Dan Herrera
Bachelor of Arts
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About
13
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Introduction
Interested in urban ecology, urban adaptations, urban reconciliation, animal behavior, camera trapping, science communication, and citizen science.
Publications
Publications (13)
Ongoing urbanization and land transformation drive profound changes in ecosystems worldwide, with wildlife responding in myriad ways. Particularly, functional homogenization of wildlife communities due to these widespread changes may reduce biodiversity and urban ecosystem resilience. However, there are benefits of urbanization (e.g., increased res...
Free‐roaming cats are a conservation concern in many areas but identifying their impacts and developing mitigation strategies requires a robust understanding of their distribution and density patterns. Urban and residential areas may be especially relevant in this process because free‐roaming cats are abundant in these anthropogenic landscapes. Her...
Free-roaming domestic cats (Felis catus) pose numerous risks to biodiversity conservation, especially in island ecosystems. However, the removal of cats is costly, labor-intensive, and often demands more resources than land managers have at their disposal. These costs might be reduced, however, if trapping effort is regularly scaled to match the pr...
Free-roaming domestic cats (Felis catus) are known to pose threats to ecosystem health via transmission of zoonotic diseases and predation of native wildlife. Likewise, free-roaming cats are also susceptible to predation or disease transmission from native wildlife. Physical interactions are required for many of these risks to be manifested, necess...
Accurate information about the number of cats living outdoors and how they respond to different kinds of management are necessary to quell debates about outdoor cat policy. The DC Cat Count will develop the tools and methodologies needed to realize this possibility and make them available for broader use. This three-year initiative represents a maj...
Managing wildlife populations in the face of global change requires regular data on the abundance and distribution of wild animals but acquiring these over appropriate spatial scales in a sustainable way has proven challenging. Here we present the data from Snapshot USA 2020, a second annual national mammal survey of the United States of America. T...
The ecological impact of free-roaming domestic cats (Felis catus) is well-studied. However, despite receiving considerable attention in both the scientific and popular literature, predation behavior is rarely an explicit consideration when developing cat population management plans. We used motion-activated wildlife cameras to document predation ev...
Camera trap surveys use infrared-flash camera traps more frequently than white-flash camera traps due to claims that white-flash cameras impact animal behaviour and reduce capture rates. While several studies have examined the impact of white-flash on individual behaviour, few have assessed the effect of flash type on probability of detection. We u...
With the accelerating pace of global change, it is imperative that we obtain rapid inventories of the status and distribution of wildlife for ecological inferences and conservation planning. To address this challenge, we launched the SNAPSHOT USA project, a collaborative survey of terrestrial wildlife populations using camera traps across the Unite...
Urbanization is increasing globally, fragmenting habitats and prompting human–wildlife conflict. Urban wildlife research is concurrently expanding, but sampling methods are often biased towards large and intact habitats in public green spaces, neglecting the far more abundant, but degraded, habitats in the urban matrix. Here, we introduce the Five...
Urban heat islands affect animal behavior broadly, but their effects on food webs are less
understood. In November 2018, camera trap serendipity led to the detection of a red-tailed
hawk (Buteo jamaicensis) preying upon an eastern worm snake (Carphophis amoenus amoenus) in Washington, D.C. – a previously undescribed trophic interaction. While red-t...
Background:
Tiger beetles are a widely distributed group including species that may be exposed to sub-freezing temperature overwinter. Despite being well studied, little is known about tiger beetle cold tolerance.
Objective:
We investigated seasonal changes in cold hardiness of two northerly distributed tiger beetle species (Cicindela repanda an...