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Teaching Wildlife Damage Management Through Service-Learning
As human-wildlife conflicts in South Carolina continue to increase, it became evident that students in the natural resource majors at Clemson University were not receiving the proper training and exposure to wildlife damage issues and management. To address this need, an undergraduate and graduate course was developed to expose students to various ...
Greg Yarrow
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EXTENSION WILDLIFE DAMAGE MANAGEMENT IN ALABAMA
I present a compilation of wildlife damage data collected via a mail survey distributed to 146 county agents of the Alabama Cooperative Extension Service. A 55% response rate was obtained with 2 mailings. Snakes and rodents were the cause of most wildlife damage complaints. Regional differences in the number of complaints were observed for white-tailed
James B. Armstrong
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INCORPORATING WILDLIFE DAMAGE CONTROL INTO A UNIVERSITY WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT CURRICULUM
Most university wildlife programs that do not include wildlife damage control course offerings probably lack those courses for 2 main reasons: (1) most professors in those wildlife programs likely did not have formal training in wildlife damage control in their own degree programs and therefore may not have developed the skills nor the interest to ...
William G. Misner, Alex B. Coley
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Wildlife Damage Management Series - Voles
Voles occupy a wide variety of habitats, depending on the species. Generally, voles prefer areas with heavy ground cover of grasses, grass-like plants, or litter. When two or more species inhabit an area, they generally occupy different habitats.
Ben C. West, Terry A. Messmer
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Commentary Euthanasia Methods in Field Settings for Wildlife Damage Management
Timothy J. Julien +3 more
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THE IMPACT OF WILDLIFE DAMAGE ON WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS IN WISCONSIN
Wildlife damage caused by species normally managed as game animals or furbearers should be of major concern to wildlife managers and various user groups: hunters, trappers, and other outdoor recreationists. Real or potential damage may be used as an important factor in determining population levels, harvest goals, and distribution of white-tailed deer ...
Scott R. Craven
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Applications of Sensory Ecology for Wildlife Damage Management
Human-wildlife conflicts typically involve fundamental processes associated with the feeding behavior and/or the spatial behavior of wildlife. Thus, most human-wildlife conflicts arise from wildlife consuming products and/or wildlife occupying places valued by humans.
Scott J. Werner +3 more
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Pocket Gophers: Wildlife Damage Management Series
Pocket gophers are medium-sized fossorial (burrowing) rodents, which have external fur-lined pouches located on the outside of their mouths. They use the pouches to carry food, hence the name "pocket" gopher. There are 35 species of pocket gophers in North and South America.
Terry A. Messmer, Gerald W. Wiscomb
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Wildlife Damage Management: Prevention, Problem Solving and Conflict Resolution
Travis L. DeVault
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Human–wildlife conflicts at pond fisheries in eastern Poland: perceptions and management of wildlife damage [PDF]
Janusz Kloskowski
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