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Estimating Mineral Requirements of Wild Herbivores: Modelling Arctic Caribou (Rangifer tarandus granti) in Summer. [PDF]
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Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 2009
Subcutaneous dermoid cysts were identified in eight wild caribou (Rangifer tarandus) from widely dispersed locations in northern Canada and in one wild caribou from Alaska. The dermoid cysts from Canadian caribou were found among 557 diagnostic specimens that had been detected by hunters and submitted by resource officers and biologists between 1 ...
Gary A. Wobeser+3 more
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Subcutaneous dermoid cysts were identified in eight wild caribou (Rangifer tarandus) from widely dispersed locations in northern Canada and in one wild caribou from Alaska. The dermoid cysts from Canadian caribou were found among 557 diagnostic specimens that had been detected by hunters and submitted by resource officers and biologists between 1 ...
Gary A. Wobeser+3 more
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BESNOITIOSIS IN A WOODLAND CARIBOU
Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 1976Besnoitiosis was diagnosed in an adult male woodland caribou found dead in northern Saskatchewan. The lesions present were comparable to those of chronic besnoitiosis in cattle, and were much more severe than those previously described in domestic reindeer and barren-ground caribou.
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Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 1988
The migratory tundra caribou/reindeer in the Holarctic now number three million and are increasing, approaching estimated pristine quantities in North America. In contrast, the sedentary forest races south of the tree-line number about 325 000 animals, and are declining in some areas in both Eurasia and North America. The chief natural mortality factor
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The migratory tundra caribou/reindeer in the Holarctic now number three million and are increasing, approaching estimated pristine quantities in North America. In contrast, the sedentary forest races south of the tree-line number about 325 000 animals, and are declining in some areas in both Eurasia and North America. The chief natural mortality factor
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CARIBIC: Results and Status of the Aircraft Research Project CARIBIC
2001The deployment of passenger aircraft for carrying out atmospheric chemistry measurements has an enormous potential that neatly fills the gap between capabilities of research aircraft and of satellites. Research aircraft give detailed information, in particular for short to ultra-short lived species, whereas satellite based remote sensing equipment ...
P. F. J. van Velthoven+11 more
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2015
Afew hundred miles northeast of Great Slave Lake in Canada, there’s a small hill that represents the divide between water that flows southwest into the Mackenzie River watershed and water that flows northeast into the Arctic Ocean. The longest of the rivers running northeast to the Arctic is the Back.
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Afew hundred miles northeast of Great Slave Lake in Canada, there’s a small hill that represents the divide between water that flows southwest into the Mackenzie River watershed and water that flows northeast into the Arctic Ocean. The longest of the rivers running northeast to the Arctic is the Back.
openaire +2 more sources