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Wolverine behavior varies spatially with anthropogenic footprint: implications for conservation and inferences about declines

Ecology and Evolution Publication

Dates

Creation
2018-09-24 21:19:18
Last Update
2018-09-24 21:19:18
Acquisition
2016

Citation

Tony Clevenger(Author), Great Northern Landscape Conservation Cooperative(administrator), LCC Network Data Steward(administrator), 2018-09-24(creation), 2018-09-24(lastUpdate), 2016(Acquisition), Wolverine behavior varies spatially with anthropogenic footprint: implications for conservation and inferences about declines

Summary

Understanding a species’ behavioral response to rapid environmental change is an ongoing challenge in modern conservation. Anthropogenic landscape modification, or “human footprint,” is well documented as a central cause of large mammal decline and range contractions where the proximal mechanisms of decline are often contentious. Direct mortality is an obvious cause; alternatively, human‐modified landscapes perceived as unsuitable by some species may contribute to shifts in space use through preferential habitat selection. A useful approach to tease these effects apart is to determine whether behaviors potentially associated with risk vary with human footprint. We hypothesized wolverine (Gulo gulo) behaviors vary with different degrees [...]

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ScienceBase WMS

Communities

  • Great Northern Landscape Conservation Cooperative
  • LC MAP - Landscape Conservation Management and Analysis Portal

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Type Scheme Key
File Identifier file identifier 5ba954d6e4b08583a5ca0a16

Citation Extension

citationTypepublication
languageeng
noteStewart, F.E.C., N.A. Heim A.P. Clevenger J. Paczkowski J.P. Volpe and J.T. Fisher. 2016. Wolverine behavior varies spatially with anthropogenic footprint: implications for conservation and inferences about declines. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.1921

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