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Journal Article: Pika (Ochotona princeps) losses from two isolated regions reflect temperature and water balance, but reflect habitat area in a mainland region

Dates

Start Date
2013-05-01
End Date
2016-12-05

Citation

Great Basin Landscape Conservation Cooperative(administrator), Eric Beever(Principal Investigator), Braden Yardley(Author), David Thoma(Author), Eric Beever(Author), Gail Collins(Author), John Perine(Author), Kenneth Goehring(Author), Mary Flores(Author), Michael Magnuson(Author), Nancy Nordensten(Author), Tara Chesley-Preston(Author), Tom Rickman(Author), Cara Nelson(Author), Journal Article: Pika (Ochotona princeps) losses from two isolated regions reflect temperature and water balance, but reflect habitat area in a mainland region, https://www.fws.gov/science/catalog

Summary

Although biotic responses to contemporary climate change are spatially pervasive and often reflect synergies between climate and other ecological disturbances, the relative importance of climatic factors versus habitat extent for species persistence remains poorly understood. To address this shortcoming, we performed surveys for American pikas (Ochotona princeps) at > 910 locations in 3 geographic regions of western North America during 2014 and 2015, complementing earlier modern (1994–2013) and historical (1898–1990) surveys. We sought to compare extirpation rates and the relative importance of climatic factors versus habitat area for pikas in a mainland-versus-islands framework. In each region, we found widespread evidence of distributional [...]

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urn:uuid urn:uuid b4ecd9bc-ef5a-4b8d-b635-c350ee18553a

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citationTypesciencePaper
languageeng

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