The following pages link to Matthew Kauffman, PhD (Q47134):
Displayed 50 items.
- Demographic drivers of a refugee species: Large‐scale experiments guide strategies for reintroductions of hirola (Q145175) (← links)
- Moving in the Anthropocene: Global reductions in terrestrial mammalian movements (Q145435) (← links)
- Diel predator activity drives a dynamic landscape of fear (Q145502) (← links)
- Linking spring phenology with mechanistic models of host movement to predict disease transmission risk (Q145618) (← links)
- Short-term responses to a human-altered landscape do not affect fat dynamics of a migratory ungulate (Q145761) (← links)
- Functional connectivity in a continuously distributed, migratory species as revealed by landscape genomics (Q145778) (← links)
- Mapping out a future for ungulate migrations (Q145807) (← links)
- Emerging perspectives on resource tracking and animal movement ecology (Q145891) (← links)
- Sex-specific migratory behaviors in a temperate ungulate (Q146168) (← links)
- Migration distance and maternal resource allocation determine timing of birth in a large herbivore (Q146192) (← links)
- Sex-specific behaviors of hunted mule deer during rifle season (Q146464) (← links)
- Detecting resource limitation in a large herbivore population is enhanced with measures of nutritional condition (Q146501) (← links)
- Drivers of site fidelity in ungulates (Q146544) (← links)
- Elk migration patterns and human activity influence wolf habitat use in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (Q147622) (← links)
- Spatial memory shapes migration and its benefits: Evidence from a large herbivore (Q149253) (← links)
- Large herbivores surf waves of green-up during spring (Q151548) (← links)
- Reproduction in moose at their southern range limit (Q151549) (← links)
- The extra mile: Ungulate migration distance alters the use of seasonal range and exposure to anthropogenic risk (Q153325) (← links)
- State-dependent behavior alters endocrine–energy relationship: Implications for conservation and management (Q156438) (← links)
- Functional attributes of ungulate migration: Landscape features facilitate movement and access to forage (Q156457) (← links)
- Life-history theory provides a framework for detecting resource limitation: A test of the Nutritional Buffer Hypothesis (Q156492) (← links)
- Wind-energy development alters pronghorn migration at multiple scales (Q156727) (← links)
- An analysis of autocorrelation and bias in home range estimation (Q156738) (← links)
- Alternative foraging strategies enable a mountain ungulate to persist after migration loss (Q156865) (← links)
- Variable effects of wind-energy development on seasonal habitat selection of pronghorn (Q157271) (← links)
- Antipredator response diminishes during periods of resource deficit for a large herbivore (Q157350) (← links)
- Conserving transboundary wildlife migrations: Recent insights from the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (Q157764) (← links)
- Quantifying the Influence of Climate Change on Rocky Mountain Ungulates (Q160333) (← links)
- Linking Mule Deer Migration to Spring Green-Up in Wyoming (Q160624) (← links)
- Wyoming Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit (Q225532) (← links)
- Contributions to the development of the Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies Sagebrush Conservation Strategy (Q227647) (← links)
- Endemic chronic wasting disease causes mule deer population decline in Wyoming (Q239623) (← links)
- The greenscape shapes surfing of resource waves in a large migratory herbivore (Q239792) (← links)
- A global analysis of traits predicting species sensitivity to habitat fragmentation (Q240179) (← links)
- A framework for understanding semi-permeable barrier effects on migratory ungulates (Q242795) (← links)
- Relative influence of human harvest, carnivores, and weather on adult female elk survival across western North America (Q243180) (← links)
- Animal migration amid shifting patterns of phenology and predation: Lessons from a Yellowstone elk herd (Q243195) (← links)
- Grizzly bear predation links the loss of native trout to the demography of migratory elk in Yellowstone (Q243557) (← links)
- Linking anti-predator behaviour to prey demography reveals limited risk effects of an actively hunting large carnivore (Q243586) (← links)
- Rejoinder: Challenge and opportunity in the study of ungulate migration amid environmental change (Q243710) (← links)
- Confounded winter and spring phenoclimatology on large herbivore ranges (Q243827) (← links)
- Modelling interactions of toxicants and density dependence in wildlife populations (Q244054) (← links)
- Are wolves saving Yellowstone's aspen? A landscape-level test of a behaviorally mediated trophic cascade (Q247697) (← links)
- Stopover ecology of a migratory ungulate (Q250292) (← links)
- Long-term population dynamics of a managed burrowing owl colony (Q250316) (← links)
- Effectiveness of partial sedation to reduce stress in captured mule deer (Q253355) (← links)
- Wave-like patterns of plant phenology determine ungulate movement tactics (Q253359) (← links)
- Bark beetle-affected forests provide elk only a marginal refuge from hunters (Q253394) (← links)
- Reply to Craine: Bison redefine what it means to move to find food (Q253589) (← links)
- Causes, consequences, and conservation of ungulate migration (Q259433) (← links)