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Human-caused mortality influences spatial population dynamics: Pumas in landscapes with varying mortality risks

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Jesse R. Newby, L. Scott Mills, Toni K. Ruth, Daniel H. Pletscher, Michael S Mitchell, Howard B. Quigley, Kerry M. Murphy, and Rich DeSimone, 2013-03, Human-caused mortality influences spatial population dynamics: Pumas in landscapes with varying mortality risks: Biological Conservation, v. 159, 230–239 p.

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Abstract (from http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0006320712004387#): An understanding of how stressors affect dispersal attributes and the contribution of local populations to multi-population dynamics are of immediate value to basic and applied ecology. Puma ( Puma concolor) populations are expected to be influenced by inter-population movements and susceptible to human-induced source–sink dynamics. Using long-term datasets we quantified the contribution of two puma populations to operationally define them as sources or sinks. The puma population in the Northern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (NGYE) was largely insulated from human-induced mortality by Yellowstone National Park. Pumas in the western Montana Garnet Mountain [...]

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  • National CASC
  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers

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citationTypeJournal Article
journalBiological Conservation
parts
typedoi
value10.1016/j.biocon.2012.10.018
typeVolume
value159
typePages
value 230–239

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