Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 37
pro vyhledávání: '"Philip A. Frank"'
Autor:
Nova J. Silvy, Roel R. Lopez, Cristian N. Lopez, Jewel A. Uzquiano, Philip A. Frank, Wendy Wheatley-Techmer
Publikováno v:
Southeastern Naturalist. 21
Autor:
Philip A. Frank, Markus J. Peterson, David H. LaFever, Craig A. Faulhaber, Roel R. Lopez, Nova J. Silvy
Publikováno v:
Journal of Wildlife Management. 72:1161-1167
We used radiotelemetry to locate daytime forms of endangered Lower Keys marsh rabbits (LKMRs; Sylvilagus palustris hefneri) throughout their range so we could determine habitat characteristics of diurnal cover. We typically found forms (n = 1,298) of
Autor:
Neil D. Perry, Markus J. Peterson, Craig A. Faulhaber, Philip A. Frank, Phillip T. Hughes, Nova J. Silvy, Roel R. Lopez
Publikováno v:
Journal of Wildlife Management. 71:208-212
The Lower Keys marsh rabbit (LKMR; Sylvilagus palustris hefneri) is endemic to the Lower Keys of Florida and exists as a metapopulation in patches of salt-marsh–buttonwood transition zone, freshwater wetlands, and coastal beach berm vegetation (For
Autor:
Brian H. Houston, Alain R. Berdoz, Larry A. Kraus, Steve W. Liskey, Philip A. Frank, Carl K. Frederickson, Steve Stanic, Erik C. Porse, Harry J. Simpson
Publikováno v:
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 121:85-97
Shallow-water propagation experiments were carried out in St. Andrews Bay, Florida. These investigations used a vertical one-dimensional synthetic array measurement system where two hydrophones incrementally mapped the acoustic pressure from 2m below
Autor:
Craig A. Faulhaber, Nova J. Silvy, Neil D. Perry, Markus J. Peterson, Roel R. Lopez, Philip A. Frank
Publikováno v:
ResearcherID
The endangered Lower Keys marsh rabbit (LKMR; Sylvilagus palustris hefneri) exists as a metapopulation in patches of wetland habitat in the Lower Florida Keys, USA. The recovery plan for the LKMR recommends reintroducing rabbits to unoccupied but pot
Publikováno v:
Ecological Modelling. 195:393-401
Metapopulation dynamics of species that occur in patchy or island subpopulations are an important consideration in the conservation of endangered species. Key deer ( Odocoileus virginianus clavium ) are endemic to the Florida Keys and occur on 11 isl
Publikováno v:
The American Midland Naturalist. 155:197-209
Over the last two decades, declines in trap success, stick-nest density and population density estimates have fueled concerns that the federally endangered Key Largo woodrat (KLWR, Neotoma floridana smalli) population is declining. Information on the
Autor:
Anthony W. Braden, Clay W. Roberts, Philip A. Frank, Roel R. Lopez, Brian L. Pierce, Nova J. Silvy, Dean Ransom
Publikováno v:
Journal of Wildlife Management. 70:263-267
Wildlife managers require reliable, cost-effective, and accurate methods for conducting population surveys in making wildlife management decisions. Traditional methods such as spotlight counts, drive counts, strip counts (aerial, thermal, infrared) a
Autor:
Roel R. Lopez, Brad A. Porter, Nova J. Silvy, Craig A. Faulhaber, Philip A. Frank, Markus J. Peterson
Publikováno v:
Wildlife Society Bulletin. 33:1160-1163
Drift fences, often in conjunction with pitfall or funnel traps, commonly are used to capture amphibians and reptiles (Gibbons and Semlitsch 1981, Corn 1994), small mammals (Kirkland and Sheppard 1994), and fledgling birds (Nettleship 1969). Gibbons
Autor:
Edward J. Laurent, Roel R. Lopez, Nova J. Silvy, Philip A. Frank, Jianguo Liu, M. Nils Peterson
Publikováno v:
Conservation Biology. 19:939-944
Wildlife extinction represents the ultimate failure of wildlife conservation. It has many causes, some of them natural, but is increasingly tied to anthropogenic factors. Wildlife loss via domestication, however, is rarely considered. We evaluated th