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Assessing the influence of resource co-variates at multiple spatial scales: an application to forest-dwelling caribou faced with intensive human activity.

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Mathieu Leblond, Jacqueline Frair, Daniel Fortin, Christian Dussault, Jean-Pierre Ouellet, and Rehaume Courtois, 2011, Assessing the influence of resource co-variates at multiple spatial scales: an application to forest-dwelling caribou faced with intensive human activity.: Landscape Ecology 26, no. 10 (2011): 1433-1446.

Summary

Synopsis: Using multi-scale seasonal models, this study explored how broad scale landscape context and local resource heterogeneity influenced local resource selection among threatened forest-dwelling woodland caribou in southern Quebec. Caribou consistently avoided roads, however researchers identified thresholds in road proximity effects. The threshold distance at which caribou avoid roads is 1.25 km for active roads and 0.75 km from derelict roads. Open lichen woodlands were an important cover type for caribou during winter and spring, whereas deciduous forests, wetlands, and even young disturbed stands became important during calving and summer. Landscape cover type and amount explained more variation in habitat selection by caribou [...]

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  • Great Northern Landscape Conservation Cooperative
  • LC MAP - Landscape Conservation Management and Analysis Portal
  • Landscape Patterns Catalog

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Added to ScienceBase on Thu Feb 20 15:25:46 UTC 2014 by processing file <b>LandscapePattern_Database_5_9_AMENDED_MattsBibEdits_v2.xlsx</b>Augmented by Sasha Harriott Jan 22, 2015
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Landscape Patterns Catalog
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LandscapePattern_Database_5_9_AMENDED_MattsBibEdits_v2.xlsx

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LCPID SourceID 59

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citationTypeJournal Article
journalLandscape Ecology 26, no. 10 (2011): 1433-1446

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