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M. Apuk Ismane,Cecep Kusmana,Andi Gunawan,Ridwan Affandi,Surachman Suwardi
Pág. 36 - 43
accordance with high exploitation of turtle in several sectors and will threatened the turtle sustainability in the future. The aim of this study is to analyze the situational condition of environmental biophysics, socio-economic of the population,...
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Alan Burger,F. Louise Waterhouse,John Deal,David Lank,David S. Donald
Identifying and mapping suitable nesting habitat within coastal forests is a key element in the recovery and management of the Marbled Murrelet (Brachyramphus marmoratus), which is listed as Threatened in Canada. This article reviews the reliability and ...
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Doris Hausleitner,Jakob Dulisse,Irene Manley,Amy Waterhouse
The interior Western Screech-Owl (Megascops kennicottii macfarlanei) has been assessed as a species at risk. Regionally, survival rates are low, particularly during nesting. This study uses forward stepwise logistic regression to assess habitat selection...
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Erica McClaren,Todd Mahon,Frank I. Doyle,William L. Harrower
Northern Goshawks (Accipiter gentilis laingi) have been recognized as a species of management concern in western North America for over 20 years. One of the most significant factors threatening Northern Goshawk populations in coastal British Columbia is ...
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Vitalis W. Temu, Brian S. Baldwin, K. Raja Reddy and Samuel K. Riffell
Managing grasslands for forage and ground-nesting bird habitat requires appropriate defoliation strategies. Subsequent early-summer species composition in mixed stands of native warm-season grasses (Indiangrass (IG, Sorghastrum nutans), big bluest...
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Vitalis W. Temu, Brian S. Baldwin, K. Raja Reddy, Samuel Riffell and Loren W. Burger
Agricultural intensification in America has replaced native warm-season grasses (NWSG) with introduced forages causing wildlife habitat loss and population declines for the northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) and similar ground-nesting birds. ...
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Monica Mather,Trudy Chatwin,Jenna Cragg,Linda Sinclair,Douglas Bertram
The Marbled Murrelet is legally listed as a Threatened species in Canada primarily due to loss of nesting habitat. The Marbled Murrelet Nesting Habitat Suitability Model for the British Columbia Coast is a model developed to predict the amount and distri...
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F. Louise Waterhouse,Alan E. Burger,Peter Ott,Ann Donaldson,David B. Lank
Accurate and reliable identification of potential nesting habitat is required to manage for the threatened Marbled Murrelet (Brachyramphus marmoratus). Three habitat classifications are typically used by wildlife planners: a bivariate suitability algorit...
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F. Louise Waterhouse,Alan E. Burger,David B. Lank,Peter Ott,Elsie Krebs,Nadine Parker
Identifying and managing nesting habitat for the threatened Marbled Murrelet (Brachyramphus marmoratus) is difficult because it nests secretively, high in the canopies of large, old conifers of the Pacific Northwest. In British Columbia, low-level survey...
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Alan E. Burger,F. Louise Waterhouse
We review relationships between the area and quality of apparently suitable nesting habitat (as defined by canopy structure) and the population size of Marbled Murrelets (Brachyramphus marmoratus) which such habitat might support. This information is imp...
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