Posts Tagged: recolonization
Temporal dynamics in gray wolf space use suggest stabilizing range in the Great Lakes region
November 6, 2024
Species distribution models can facilitate conservation planning and action but presume species-environment relationships are stable, which is not the case for invasive or recolonizing species only partially occupying their potential distributions. This complicates our understanding of colonization and recolonization processes … read more
Posted in Biology, Resources | Tagged Equilibrium, gray wolf, Range stabilization, recolonization, Space use, Species distribution
Gray wolf range in the western Great Lakes region under forecasted land use and climate change
February 1, 2024
Land use and climate change alter species distributions worldwide, and detecting and understanding how species ranges shift can facilitate conservation planning and action. Following extirpation from most of the contiguous United States, gray wolves (Canis lupus) have partially recolonized former … read more
Posted in Habitat | Tagged carnivore, climate change, distribution, global change, gray wolf, land use change, range stability, recolonization
Socioeconomic Benefits Of Large Carnivore Recolonization Through Reduced Wildlife Collision
June 10, 2019
The decline of top carnivores has released large herbivore populations around the world, incurring socioeconomic costs such as increased animal-vehicle collisions. Attempts to control overabundant deer in the Eastern U.S. have largely failed, and deer-vehicle collisions (DVCs) continue to rise … read more
Posted in Benefits of Wolves | Tagged benefits, carnivore, large, recolonization, socioeconomic, through