Title
Wolverine habitat selection in response to anthropogenic disturbance in the western Canadian boreal forest
Author(s)
Scrafford, M.A., Avgar, T., Abercrombie, B., Tigner, J., and Boyce, M.S. 2017.
Published
2017
Publisher
Forest Ecology and Management
Abstract
This study evaluated alternative hypotheses that anthropogenic disturbance can attract versus displace wolverines (Gulo gulo luscus). Radiotelemetry was used to track wolverine habitat use over three years in the boreal forests of northwestern Alberta. They used resource selection functions (used/available design) to analyze wolverine habitat selection patterns during summer and winter seasons.
Full Citation
Matthew A. Scrafford, Tal Avgar, Bill Abercrombie, Jesse Tigner, Mark S. Boyce, Wolverine habitat selection in response to anthropogenic disturbance in the western Canadian boreal forest, Forest Ecology and Management, Volume 395, 1 July 2017, Pages 27-36, ISSN 0378-1127, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2017.03.029.

Access Full Text



Back

DMX3335800000