Heavily hunted wolves have higher stress and reproductive steroids than wolves with lower hunting pressure

Author:

Bryan Heather M.1234,Smits Judit E. G.1,Koren Lee15,Paquet Paul C.236,Wynne‐Edwards Katherine E.1,Musiani Marco16

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Veterinary Medicine University of Calgary 3280 Hospital Drive NWCalgary AB Canada T2N 4Z6

2. Raincoast Conservation Foundation PO Box 2429 Sidney BC Canada V8L 1Y2

3. Department of Geography University of Victoria PO Box 3060 STN CSC Victoria BC Canada V8W 3R4

4. Hakai Beach Institute PO Box 309 Heriot Bay BC Canada V0P 1H0

5. The Mina and Everard Goodman Faculty of Life Sciences Bar‐Ilan University Ramat Gan 52900 Israel

6. Faculty of Environmental Design University of Calgary 2500 University Dr NW Calgary ABCanada T2N 1N4

Funder

National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery Grants

World Wildlife Fund

Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers

University of Calgary Faculty of Veterinary Medicine

NSERC industrial post-graduate scholarship

University of Calgary Queen Elizabeth II Scholarship Program

UCVM Department of Ecosystem and Public Health Studentship Program

UCVM Post-doctoral Fellowship

Hakai Program

Tula Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference92 articles.

1. Cortisol determination in hair and faeces from domestic cats and dogs

2. Population Dynamics and Harvest Characteristics of Wolves in the Central Brooks Range, Alaska

3. Hormone-dependent aggression in male and female rats: Experiential, hormonal, and neural foundations

4. Glucocorticosteroid concentrations in feces and hair of captive caribou and reindeer following adrenocorticotropic hormone challenge

5. ASRA & ACA(2010)Status of the woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) in Alberta: update 2010. Wildlife Status Report No. 30 (update 2010).Alberta Sustainable Resource Development (ASRD) and Alberta Conservation Association (ACA) Edmonton Alberta Canada. 88 pp. Available fromhttp://srd.alberta.ca/Fishwildlife/SpeciesAtRisk/DetailedStatus/Mammals/documents/Status-WoodlandCaribou-inAlberta-Jul-2010.pdf(accessed January 2014).

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