Results 111 to 120 of about 166,119 (245)
USA-Mexico border wall impedes wildlife movement
Geopolitical boundaries can present challenges to wildlife conservation because of varying environmental regulations, and increasingly, the existence of border barriers.
Eamon J. Harrity +5 more
doaj +1 more source
The ecological footprint of recreation: Impacts on mountain goat habitat selection
Abstract Understanding the relationship between wildlife and their environment is important to wildlife management. Factors such as human disturbance that influence the behavior of animals have implications for management decisions and are critical to consider in evaluations of wildlife habitat selection.
Kaitlin Macdonald +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Coexistence under constraint: Spatiotemporal co‐occurrence in a dryland carnivore guild
Abstract Interspecific competition plays a crucial role in shaping the structure and dynamics of large carnivore guilds. Extreme temperatures and heightened resource heterogeneity in drylands can present additional challenges to intraguild coexistence, potentially making dryland carnivore guilds particularly susceptible to climate change and ...
Nicholas Pilaud +10 more
wiley +1 more source
Moose indifferent to canopy loss from forest disturbance by bark beetles
Moose showed strikingly similar patterns of habitat selection before and after widespread forest disturbance following an infestation of bark beetles. Our findings indicate that beetle‐kill does not appreciably alter habitat quality for moose and highlight the importance of riparian areas in sustaining moose as they contend with changing forests ...
Alexander B. May +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Nonmetro Recreation Counties: Their Identification and Rapid Growth [PDF]
More than 80 percent of the Nation’s 285 million people now reside in metropolitan areas. Many in this vast city and suburban population are attracted to the recreational opportunities and attractions of rural areas, such as beautiful scenery, lakes ...
Beale, Calvin L, Johnson, Kenneth M.
core +1 more source
Supporting interventions to lessen human–wildlife conflict
Abstract Human–wildlife conflict (HWC) around protected areas endangers lives and damages livelihoods. It also erodes support for conservation. Yet most mitigation efforts fail to gain the sustained community support needed for long‐term success. We drew on 758 one‐to‐one semi‐structured interviews, supplemented by focus groups, practitioner interviews
Douglas Sheil, Emmanuel Akampurira
wiley +1 more source
Spartan Daily, March 3, 1952 [PDF]
Volume 40, Issue 101https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/11692/thumbnail ...
San Jose State University, School of Journalism and Mass Communications
core +1 more source
Hunting and fishing harvest data collection: a horizon scanning exercise from the French context
Legal and societal moves increasingly lead leisure hunting and fishing practitioners to record their harvest. The total number of individuals harvested per population per year is the minimum required information to feed into demographic models and allow science‐based management. Some few schemes record more detailed data, hence allowing better‐informed
Matthieu Guillemain +17 more
wiley +1 more source
Biological and environmental drivers of early life fawn survival in a declining pronghorn population
Pronghorn Antilocapra americana occupy only a portion of their historical range and in Oklahoma occur at the eastern edge of the species' contemporary distribution. Monitoring has suggested pronghorn populations in Oklahoma have declined in recent years.
Derek P. Hahn +10 more
wiley +1 more source

