نتایج جستجو برای: 2002 forest composition around wolf canis lupus dens in eastern algonquin provincial park

تعداد نتایج: 17108054  

2006
Tad Larsen

Gray wolves (Canis lupus) were once widespread throughout most of North America including the Pacific Northwest. Wolves were extirpated from the Pacific Northwest in the early 20 century and have been absent for over 60 years. The success of reintroduction efforts in Idaho and the greater Yellowstone area, however, has caused wolf populations in these regions to rise dramatically, giving way to...

2010
Linda Y. Rutledge Brent R. Patterson Kenneth J. Mills Karen M. Loveless Dennis L. Murray Bradley N. White

Legal and illegal killing of animals near park borders can significantly increase the threat of extirpation for populations living within ecological reserves, especially for wide-ranging large carnivores that regularly travel into unprotected areas. While the consequences of human-caused mortality near protected areas generally focus on numerical responses, little attention has been given to im...

2017
Ana Elisabete Pires Isabel R Amorim Carla Borges Fernanda Simões Tatiana Teixeira Andreia Quaresma Francisco Petrucci-Fonseca José Matos

This study investigates the gene pool of Portuguese autochthonous dog breeds and their wild counterpart, the Iberian wolf subspecies (Canis lupus signatus), using standard molecular markers. A combination of paternal and maternal molecular markers was used to investigate the genetic composition, genetic differentiation and genetic relationship of native Portuguese dogs and the Iberian wolf. A t...

Journal: :Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America 2010
Layne G Adams Sean D Farley Craig A Stricker Dominic J Demma Gretchen H Roffler Dennis C Miller Robert O Rye

Wolves (Canis lupus) in North America are considered obligate predators of ungulates with other food resources playing little role in wolf population dynamics or wolf prey relations. However, spawning Pacific salmon (Oncorhyncus spp.) are common throughout wolf range in northwestern North America and may provide a marine subsidy affecting inland wolf-ungulate food webs far from the coast. We co...

Journal: :Biology letters 2008
Jennifer A Leonard Robert K Wayne

Wolves from the Great Lakes area were historically decimated due to habitat loss and predator control programmes. Under the protection of the US Endangered Species Act, the population has rebounded to approximately 3000 individuals. We show that the pre-recovery population was dominated by mitochondrial DNA haplotypes from an endemic American wolf referred to here as the Great Lakes wolf. In co...

Journal: :Environmental pollution 2004
Shane R de Solla Kimberly J Fernie

PCBs, organochlorine pesticides and dioxins/furans in snapping turtle eggs and plasma (Chelydra serpentina) were evaluated at three Areas of Concern (AOCs) on Lake Erie and its connecting channels (St. Clair River, Detroit River, and Wheatley Harbour), as well as two inland reference sites (Algonquin Provincial Park and Tiny Marsh) in 2001-2002. Eggs from the Detroit River and Wheatley Harbour ...

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