Mammals of the Superior National Forest in Minnesota

Mammals of the Superior National Forest in Minnesota

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1981

Total Pages: 92

ISBN-13:

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The mammals of the Superior National Forest are common (short-tailed shrew, pygmy shrew, masked shrew, snowshoe hare, meadow vole, red-backed vole, Eastern chipmunk, red squirrel, northern flying squirrel, deer mouse, beaver, muskrat, red fox, mink, striped skunk, white-tailed deer, moose), fairly common (Arctic shrew, northern water shrew, little brown bat, meadow jumping mouse, woodland jumping mouse, porcupine, gray wolf, black bear, bobcat, fisher, river otter, short-tailed weasel, woodchuck), rare (star-nosed mole, Keen's bat, silver-haired bat, red bat, hoary bat, cottontail rabbit, least chipmunk, gray squirrel, Norway rat, coyote, raccoon, pine marten, least weasel, long-tailed weasel, lynx), and very rare (Franklin's ground squirrel, thirteen-lined ground squirrel, gray fox, cougar, badger).


Wildlife 2001: Populations

Wildlife 2001: Populations

Author: D.R. McCullough

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-12-06

Total Pages: 1156

ISBN-13: 9401128685

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In 1984, a conference called Wildlife 2000: Modeling habitat relationships of terrestrial vertebrates, was held at Stanford Sierra Camp at Fallen Leaf Lake in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California. The conference was well-received, and the published volume (Verner, J. , M. L. Morrison, and C. J. Ralph, editors. 1986. Wildlife 2000: modeling habitat relationships of terrestrial vertebrates, University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, Wisconsin, USA) proved to be a landmark publication that received a book award by The Wildlife Society. Wildlife 2001: populations was a followup conference with emphasis on the other major biological field of wildlife conservation and management, populations. It was held on July 29-31, 1991, at the Oakland Airport Hilton Hotel in Oakland, California, in accordance with our intent that this conference have a much stronger international representation than did Wildlife 2000. The goal of the conference was to bring together an international group of specialists to address the state of the art in wildlife population dynamics, and set the agenda for future research and management on the threshold of the 21st century. The mix of specialists included workers in theoretical, as well as practical, aspects of wildlife conservation and management. Three general sessions covered methods, modelling, and conservation of threatened species.