Meet five, nine and fourteen Yellowstone's heroine wolves
Article Abstract:
Fourteen gray wolves were captured in Canada in 1995 and transported to Yellowstone National Park to beget a new population as no wolves had been in the park for almost 70 years. The year 2005, being the tenth anniversary of the restoration of wolves to Yellowstone National Park, is the right time to pay homage to the three female wolves, known as Five, Nine and Fourteen, who began the first packs that continue to anchor the park's wolf population.
Publication Name: Wildlife Conservation
Subject: Zoology and wildlife conservation
ISSN: 1048-4949
Year: 2005
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Swamp bears
Article Abstract:
A study on Ocala bear was conducted by the biologists in which data on population numbers, survival rates, and especially, on bear crossings along State Road 40, an east-west corridor bisecting the national forest, was collected. The study revealed that the highway death toll amounts to about 8% of the study population within the sustainable range.
Publication Name: Wildlife Conservation
Subject: Zoology and wildlife conservation
ISSN: 1048-4949
Year: 2005
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: How many grizzlies in Yellowstone? Using the Lotka-Leslie model for sea otters. What should we do about hypothesis testing?
- Abstracts: MAXO signals: A new and unfortunate solution to the Fermi paradox. Message in a bottle
- Abstracts: Jarosite as an indicator of water-limited chemical weathering on mars. part 2 Single-mode heat conduction by photons
- Abstracts: Factors preventing the recovery of New Zealand forests following control of invasive deer. Climatic Suitability, Life-History Traits, Introduction Effort, and the Establishment and Spread of Introduced Mammals in Australia
- Abstracts: Distribution and habitat use of Ross's and lesser snow geese during late brood rearing. A complete species census and evidence for regional declines in piping plovers