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Evaluating methods to quantify anthropogenic stressors on wild animals

Dates

Year
2007

Citation

Tarlow, E.M., and Blumstein, D.T., 2007, Evaluating methods to quantify anthropogenic stressors on wild animals: Applied Animal Behaviour Science, v. 102, iss. 3-4, p. 429-451.

Summary

Humans have a variety of direct and indirect impacts on wildlife and a number of methods have been proposed to identify and quantify anthropogenic stressors that negatively impact wildlife. The ideal method would ultimately help predict the presence, absence, or population viability of animals living with a particular stressor. We critically review seven methods that have been used, or are potentially useful, to identify anthropogenic stressors on animals. We rank them from fitness indicators to disturbance indicators: breeding success, mate choice, fluctuating asymmetry, flight initiation distance, immunocompetence, glucocorticoids, and cardiac response. We describe each method's ease of use, precision in quantifying the stressor, [...]

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  • Western Energy Citation Clearinghouse

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Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI WECC []
ISSN WECC 0168-1591

Citation Extension

citationTypeJournal Article
journalApplied Animal Behaviour Science
parts
typePages
value429-451
typeVolume
value102
typeIssue
value3-4

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