Spatial factors related to mortality and population decline of endangered mountain caribou

Author:

Apps Clayton D.1,Mclellan Bruce N.2,Kinley Trevor A.3,Serrouya Robert4,Seip Dale R.5,Wittmer Heiko U.6

Affiliation:

1. Aspen Wildlife Research; 2708 Cochrane Road N.W. Calgary Alberta T2M 4H9 Canada

2. Ministry of Forests; Lands and Natural Resource Operations; RPO #3, Box 9158 Revelstoke British Columbia Canada

3. Sylvan Consulting; RR5, 3519 Toby Creek Road Invermere British Columbia V0A 1K5 Canada

4. Columbia Mountains Caribou Project; RPO #3, P.O. Box 9158 Revelstoke British Columbia V0E 3K0 Canada

5. Ministry of Environment; 5th Floor, 1011-4th Ave. Prince George British Columbia V2L3H9 Canada

6. School of Biological Sciences; Victoria University of Wellington; P.O. Box 600 Wellington 6140 New Zealand

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference59 articles.

1. Akaike , H. 1973 Information theory as an extension of the maximum likelihood principle. Pages 267-281 in B. N. Petrov, F. Csaki, editors. Second International Symposium on Information Theory. Akademiai Kiado, Budapest, Hungary

2. Concerns about finding effects that are actually spurious;Anderson;Wildlife Society Bulletin,2001

3. Apps , C. D. T. A. Kinley 2000 Multi-scale habitat associations of mountain caribou in the southern Purcell Mountains, British Columbia. Prepared for East Kootenay Environmental Society and Crestbrook Forest Industries Aspen Wildlife Research Calgary, Alberta, Canada

4. Factors influencing the dispersion and fragmentation of endangered mountain caribou populations;Apps;Biological Conservation,2006

5. Scale-dependent habitat selection by mountain caribou, Columbia Mountains, British Columbia;Apps;Journal of Wildlife Management,2001

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