The following pages link to Stephen DeStefano (Q139304):
Displayed 40 items.
- Moving in the Anthropocene: Global reductions in terrestrial mammalian movements (Q145435) (← links)
- Wildlife corridors and developed landscapes (Q148878) (← links)
- Black bears alter movements in response to anthropogenic features with time of day and season (Q149447) (← links)
- Wild canid distribution and co-existence in a natural–urban matrix of the Pioneer Valley of Western Massachusetts (Q149686) (← links)
- Ungulate browsers promote herbaceous layer diversity in logged temperate forests (Q151529) (← links)
- Roost site selection by ring-billed and herring gulls (Q153098) (← links)
- Multiple browsers structure tree recruitment in logged temperate forests (Q153124) (← links)
- Long-term deer exclusion has complex effects on a suburban forest understory (Q153329) (← links)
- Common loon nest defense against an American mink (Q153799) (← links)
- Effects of spatial disturbance on common loon nest site selection and territory success (Q153861) (← links)
- Assessing gull abundance and food availability in urban parking lots (Q233847) (← links)
- Functional response of ungulate browsers in disturbed eastern hemlock forests (Q234550) (← links)
- Seasonal foraging responses of beavers to sodium-enhanced foods: An experimental assessment with field feeding trials (Q234785) (← links)
- Distribution and abundance of the Yuma clapper rail (Rallus longirostris yumanensis) in the Colorado River delta, México (Q235240) (← links)
- Size and mass of grit in gizzards of sandhill cranes, tundra swans, and mute swans (Q235435) (← links)
- Using urban forest assessment tools to model bird habitat potential (Q237103) (← links)
- A versatile technique for capturing urban gulls during winter (Q237246) (← links)
- Fidelity and persistence of Ring-billed (Larus delawarensis) and Herring (Larus argentatus) gulls to wintering sites (Q238661) (← links)
- Urban forest management in New England: Towards a contemporary understanding of tree wardens in Massachusetts communities (Q240247) (← links)
- A Common Loon incubates rocks as surrogates for eggs (Q244805) (← links)
- Status of exotic grasses and grass-like vegetation and potential impacts on wildlife in New England (Q244860) (← links)
- Stainless-steel wires exclude gulls from a wastewater treatment plant (Q244958) (← links)
- Leopard density estimates at a park/farmland boundary in north-central Namibia (Q251485) (← links)
- Survival and harvest-related mortality of white-tailed deer in Massachusetts (Q251787) (← links)
- Characteristics of successful volunteer-led urban forest tree committees in Massachusetts (Q258631) (← links)
- Space use and movements of moose in Massachusetts: implications for conservation of large mammals in a fragmented environment (Q263723) (← links)
- Incorporating road crossing data into vehicle collision risk models for moose (Alces americanus) in Massachusetts, USA (Q267246) (← links)
- Forest exlosures: an experimental approach to understanding browsing by moose and deer (Q267643) (← links)
- Bald eagle predation on common loon egg (Q267755) (← links)
- Response of moose to a high‐density road network (Q268475) (← links)
- Perspectives and future directions (Q271033) (← links)
- Demography of Northern Spotted Owls in southwestern Oregon (Q277367) (← links)
- Moose habitat in Massachusetts: Assessing use at the southern edge of the range (Q278350) (← links)
- Effects of early-successional shrubland management on breeding wood thrush populations (Q290476) (← links)
- Wildlife habitat management on college and university campuses (Q299224) (← links)
- Status and management of moose in the northeastern United States (Q301955) (← links)
- Nesting habitat and productivity of Swainson's Hawks in southeastern Arizona (Q304481) (← links)
- Lead poisoning as a component of morbidity and mortality in carcasses of eastern prairie population Canada geese (Q307305) (← links)
- Tracking the Commonwealth’s moose: GPS technology and the Massachusetts moose research project (Q310154) (← links)
- Range expansion in unfavorable environments through behavioral responses to microclimatic conditions: Moose (Alces americanus) as the model (Q314161) (← links)