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Counting the ghosts of the mountains: sampling snow leopard populations at large spatial scales – The Applied Ecologist

By A Mystery Man Writer

Effective management of large carnivores requires robust monitoring at all scales. In their latest research, Manvi Sharma and colleagues describe the first systematic effort at estimating snow leopard populations at a large regional scale. The high-altitude mountains of the Himalaya are important habitats for unique flora and fauna adapted to these regions. The most charming…

An empirical demonstration of the effect of study design on density estimations

PDF) Estimating snow leopard (Panthera uncia) abundance and distribution in Jigme Dorji National Park using camera traps: A technical report

Counting sheep on the trail of the Mountain Ghost - Conservation Leadership Programme

Social information modifies the associations between forest fragmentation and the abundance of a passerine bird

population monitoring – The Applied Ecologist

The Ecology of Browsing and Grazing, PDF, Herbivore

Hotspots of pest-induced US urban tree death: culprits, impacted tree species, and spatial hotspots – The Applied Ecologist

population monitoring – The Applied Ecologist

Frontiers Future Directions in Conservation Research on Petrels and Shearwaters

Ghost of the Mountain

Spatial and Camera Methods

PDF) Using spatial Bayesian methods to determine the genetic structure of a continuously distributed population: Clusters or isolation by distance?