Skip to main content alibris logo

Neonatal Mortality of Elk in Wyoming: Environmental, Population, and Predator Effects

by , ,

Write The First Customer Review
Neonatal Mortality of Elk in Wyoming: Environmental, Population, and Predator Effects - Williams, Elizabeth S, and McFarland, Katherine C, and McDonald, Trent L
Filter Results
Item Condition
Seller Rating
Other Options
Change Currency
Browse related Subjects
+ Browse All Subjects

Public concerns over large losses of wild ungulates to predators arise when restoring large carnivore species to former locations or population densities. During the 1990s, mountain lion (Felis concolor) and grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) numbers increased in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and gray wolves (Canis lupus) were reintroduced to the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. We investigated effects of these predators, as well as black bears (Ursus americanus) and coyotes (Canis latrans), on mortality of an abundant and increasing prey ...

loading
Neonatal Mortality of Elk in Wyoming: Environmental, Population, and Predator Effects 2012, Createspace Independent Publishing Platform

ISBN-13: 9781479140985

Trade paperback