40 results on '"Bangs, Edward E."'
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2. Evaluating Wolf Translocation as a Nonlethal Method to Reduce Livestock Conflicts in the Northwestern United States
3. Wolf Dispersal in the Rocky Mountains, Western United States : 1993–2008
4. Color Patterns among Wolves in Western North America
5. Status of Gray Wolf Restoration in Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming
6. Reintroducing the Gray Wolf to Central Idaho and Yellowstone National Park
7. Effects of Wolf Removal on Livestock Depredation Recurrence and Wolf Recovery in Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming
8. Wolf Population Dynamics in the U. S. Northern Rocky Mountains Are Affected by Recruitment and Human-Caused Mortality
9. DOG LICE (TRICHODECTES CANIS) FOUND ON WOLVES (CANIS LUPUS) IN MONTANA AND IDAHO
10. Survival of Colonizing Wolves in the Northern Rocky Mountains of the United States, 1982-2004
11. Estimation of Successful Breeding Pairs for Wolves in the Northern Rocky Mountains, USA
12. The Effects of Breeder Loss on Wolves
13. Survival Rates of Adult Female Moose on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska
14. An Apparent Overexploited Lynx Population on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska
15. Habitat selection by re colonizing wolves in the northern rocky mountains in the United States
16. Summer food habits of voles, Clethrionomys rutilus and Microtus pennsylvanicus, on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska
17. Grey wolves—Yellowstone
18. Leech Parasitism of Trumpeter Swans in Alaska
19. Occurrence of the nematode Protospirura muris in Alaskan Northern Red-backed Voles, Clethrionomys rutilus
20. Reintroduction of gray wolves to Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho
21. Reintroduction of Wolves to Yellowstone National Park: History, Values and Ecosystem Restoration
22. Managing wolf–human conflict in the northwestern United States
23. Wolf population dynamics in the U.S. Northern Rocky Mountains are affected by recruitment and human-caused mortality
24. Death from anthropogenic causes is partially compensatory in recovering wolf populations
25. SARCOPTIC MANGE FOUND IN WOLVES IN THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS IN WESTERN UNITED STATES
26. A novel assessment of population structure and gene flow in grey wolf populations of the Northern Rocky Mountains of the United States
27. Temporal validation of an estimator for successful breeding pairs of wolves Canis lupus in the U.S. northern Rocky Mountains
28. Internal Validation of Predictive Logistic Regression Models for Decision‐Making in Wildlife Management
29. A Modified Museum Special Snap Trap
30. Gray Wolves, Canis lupus, Killed by Cougars, Puma concolor, and a Grizzly Bear, Ursus arctos, in Montana, Alberta, and Wyoming
31. Wolves: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation L. D. Mech L. Boitani
32. Planning and Implementing a Reintroduction of Wolves to Yellowstone National Park and Central Idaho
33. The relationship of wolf recovery to habitat conservation and biodiversity in the northwestern United States
34. Wolf population dynamics in the U.S. Northern Rocky Mountains are affected by recruitment and human-caused mortality.
35. Effects of Increased Human Populations on Wildlife Resources of the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska
36. Summer food habits of voles, Clethrionomys rutilus and Microtus pennsylvanicus, on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska
37. Occurrence of the nematode Protospirura muris in Alaskan Northern Red-backed Voles, Clethrionomys rutilus
38. An apparent overexploited lynx population on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska
39. Mech, L. D., and L. Boitani (eds.). 2003. WOLVES: BEHAVIOR, ECOLOGY, AND CONSERVATION. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, and London, United Kingdom. 448 pp. ISBN 0-226-51696-2 price (hardbound), $49.00
40. WOLVES: BEHAVIOR, ECOLOGY, AND CONSERVATION (Book).
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