Animal Life of Yellowstone National Park

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منابع مشابه

Parallel Models of Animal Migration in Northern Yellowstone National Park

In landscape ecology, computer models are developed to simulate the migration of animal groups as they exist in nature. Typically, these models are sequential, and the animal groups move and forage in sequence. In this work, we discuss a parallel implementation of the NOYELP (NOrthern YELlowstone national Park) model on a 32-processor Thinking Machines CM-5. NOYELP is a spatially-explicit indiv...

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Microbiology in Yellowstone National Park.

Yellowstone National Park plays host to numerous microbiological research projects — officially 23, according to the 1996 Investigators' Annual Reports. However, once categories such as aquatic ecology, the study of brucellosis and other wildlife diseases, environmental education, geochemistry and geothermal systems, and vegetation are included, the total came to at least 35 in 1996. Research p...

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Aquificales in Yellowstone National Park

Aquificales are metabolically versatile chemolithoautotrophic thermophilic bacteria. This group is widespread in both deep-sea and terrestrial hydrothermal systems. In Yellowstone National Park, they were first described in early descriptions of the biology of the park, and later captured the attention of many microbiologists including Brock, Stahl, Pace, and others. There are four genera curre...

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The mosquitoes of Yellowstone National Park (Diptera:Culicidae).

Twenty-nine species belonging to 4 genera of mosquitoes are reported for Yellowstone National Park. W.Y. (USA). Phenology, local distribution, and ecology of each species are addressed along with taxonomic notes on certain species. Merinithid (nematode) parasitism of some of the park's Aedes species is also discussed.

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Amphibian decline in Yellowstone National Park.

We conduct long-term amphibian monitoring in Yellowstone National Park (YNP) (1) and read McMenamin et al.’s article (2) with interest. This study documents decline in the extent of seasonal wetlands in the Lamar Valley of YNP during extended drought, but the conclusion, widely reported in the media, of ‘‘severe declines in 4 once-common amphibian species,’’ is unsupported. This study wrongly d...

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ژورنال

عنوان ژورنال: Journal of Mammalogy

سال: 1931

ISSN: 0022-2372

DOI: 10.2307/1373813