7 results match your criteria: "College of Forestry and Conservation University of Montana Missoula Montana USA.[Affiliation]"

Brook Trout () populations have experienced marked declines throughout their native range and are presently threatened due to isolation in small habitat fragments, land use changes, and climate change. The existence of numerous, spatially distinct populations poses substantial challenges for monitoring population status (e.g.

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Information about species distributions is lacking in many regions of the world, forcing resource managers to answer complex ecological questions with incomplete data. Information gaps are compounded by climate change, driving ecological bottlenecks that can act as new demographic constraints on fauna. Here, we construct greater sandhill crane () summering range in western North America using movement data from 120 GPS-tagged individuals to determine how landscape composition shaped their distributions.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Recent declines in eastern wild turkey populations have sparked interest in understanding the factors affecting their demographics and how to manage them effectively.
  • - The study involved reviewing 50 years of literature on vital rates of eastern wild turkeys, assessing various biotic and abiotic factors influencing these rates, and conducting a life-stage simulation analysis to identify key contributors to population growth.
  • - Findings indicated a low average population growth rate (0.91), with adult female survival being the most critical factor, while gaps in research highlighted the need for more investigation into diseases, weather influences, and other potentially impactful factors on wild turkey vital rates.
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Culture is widely accepted as an important social factor present across a wide range of species. Bears have a culture as defined as behavioral traditions inherited through social learning usually from mothers to offspring. Successful bear cultures can enhance fitness and resource exploitation benefits.

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There is growing evidence that prey perceive the risk of predation and alter their behavior in response, resulting in changes in spatial distribution and potential fitness consequences. Previous approaches to mapping predation risk across a landscape quantify predator space use to estimate potential predator-prey encounters, yet this approach does not account for successful predator attack resulting in prey mortality. An exception is a prey kill site that reflects an encounter resulting in mortality, but obtaining information on kill sites is expensive and requires time to accumulate adequate sample sizes.

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Fecal microbial biomarkers represent a less invasive alternative for acquiring information on wildlife populations than many traditional sampling methodologies. Our goal was to evaluate linkages between fecal microbiome communities in Rocky Mountain elk () and four host factors including sex, age, population, and physical condition (body-fat). We paired a feature-selection algorithm with an LDA-classifier trained on elk differential bacterial abundance (16S-rRNA amplicon survey) to predict host health factors from 104 elk microbiomes across four elk populations.

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Globally, human activities have led to the impoverishment of species assemblages and the disruption of ecosystem function. Determining whether this poses a threat to future ecosystem stability necessitates a thorough understanding of mechanisms underpinning community assembly and niche selection. Here, we tested for niche segregation within an African small carnivore community in Kibale National Park, Uganda.

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