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279 results on '"Wilderness areas"'

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1. Anuran occupancy varies with stream characteristics and flow across Arizona wilderness areas.

2. Challenges and opportunities in human dimensions behind cat–wildlife conflict.

3. Where wilderness is found: Evidence from 70,000 trip reports.

4. Influence of environmental conditions and initial sapling size in Nothofagus survival and growth: Implications for restoration of burnt sub‐Antarctic forests.

5. Predicting dispersal and conflict risk for wolf recolonization in Colorado.

6. Human footprints in the Global South accelerate biomass carbon loss in ecologically sensitive regions.

7. Late‐Quaternary megafauna extinctions have strongly reduced mammalian vegetation consumption.

8. Dining with a glutton: an intraguild interaction between scavenging wolverine (Gulo gulo) and lynx (Lynx canadensis).

9. Human appropriation of net primary production as driver of change in landscape‐scale vertebrate richness.

10. Science‐informed policy decisions lead to the creation of a protected area for a wide‐ranging species at risk.

11. Wilderness forms and their implications for global environmental policy and conservation.

12. Imperatives for integrated science and policy in managing greenhouse gas risks to the Southern Polar Region.

13. The wildland–urban interface in the United States based on 125 million building locations.

14. Conservation Alliance grants for environmental preservation.

15. Medium‐ to large‐bodied mammal surveys across the Neotropics are heavily biased against the most faunally intact assemblages.

16. Identifying differences in roadless areas in Canada based on global, national, and regional road datasets.

17. Wind and fire: Rapid shifts in tree community composition following multiple disturbances in the southern boreal forest.

18. Wilderness areas in a changing landscape: changes in land use, land cover, and climate.

19. The ecological niche of reported rabies cases in Canada is similar to Alaska.

20. The long way back: Development of Central European mountain forests towards old-growth conditions after cessation of management.

21. Human augmentation of historical red pine fire regimes in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness.

22. Mammal population densities at a global scale are higher in human‐modified areas.

23. Conservation Alliance grants for environmental preservation.

24. Census and distribution of large carnivores in the Tsavo national parks, a critical east African wildlife corridor.

25. Mammal species composition reveals new insights into Earth's remaining wilderness.

26. Monitoring of water surface temperature of Eurasian large lakes using MODIS land surface temperature product.

27. Deterring rodent seed‐predation using seed‐coating technologies.

28. Renewable energy development threatens many globally important biodiversity areas.

29. Low fuel cost and rising fish price threaten coral reef wilderness.

30. Protected area stewardship in the Anthropocene: integrating science, law, and ethics to evaluate proposals for ecological restoration in wilderness.

31. A biogeography‐based management for Mytilus chilensis: The genetic hodgepodge of Los Lagos versus the pristine hybrid zone of the Magellanic ecotone.

32. Finding middle ground: Extending conservation beyond wilderness areas.

33. Occupancy Patterns in a Reintroduced Fisher Population during Reestablishment.

34. Why only blue in the traditional architecture of western Himalaya, India?

35. Habitat and fishing control grazing potential on coral reefs.

36. Dispatches.

37. First confirmed record of a Cape fox, Vulpes chama, in Zimbabwe.

38. Dispatches.

39. Creating Nature in the Yucatan Peninsula: Social Inequality and the Production of Eco‐Archaeological Parks.

40. A new method for restoring ditches in peatlands: ditch filling with fiber bales.

42. Socioeconomic Benefits of Recreational, Commercial, and Subsistence Fishing Associated with National Forests.

43. Trends in vital signs for Greater Yellowstone: application of a Wildland Health Index.

44. Declining home range area predicts reduced late‐life survival in two wild ungulate populations.

45. Visions of wilderness in the North Bay communities of California.

46. Gaps and opportunities for the World Heritage Convention to contribute to global wilderness conservation.

47. Tramper perspectives on New Zealand's Great Walks in a time of transition.

48. Wildland recreation disturbance: broad-scale spatial analysis and management.

49. Ski areas affect Pacific marten movement, habitat use, and density.

50. Gauging the Effect of Honey Bee Pollen Collection on Native Bee Communities.

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