The following pages link to Kate Schoenecker, PhD (Q49163):
Displayed 50 items.
- Standard operating procedures for wild horse and burro double-observer aerial surveys (Q56693) (← links)
- Development of an aerial population survey method for elk (Cervus elaphus) in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado (Q57437) (← links)
- Development of a grazing monitoring program for Great Sand Dunes National Park, Colorado (Q59236) (← links)
- Modeling elk and bison carrying capacity for Great Sand Dunes National Park, Baca National Wildlife Refuge, and The Nature Conservancy's Medano Ranch, Colorado (Q59581) (← links)
- Bison grazing ecology at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge, Colorado (Q61139) (← links)
- Demography of the Pryor Mountain wild horses, 1993-2007 (Q63824) (← links)
- Bighorn sheep habitat studies, population dynamics, and population modeling in Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area, Wyoming and Montana, 2000-2003 (Q70471) (← links)
- Stratton Sagebrush Hydrology Study Area: An annotated bibliography of research conducted 1968-1990 (Q70485) (← links)
- Long-term persistence of horse fecal DNA in the environment makes equids particularly good candidates for non-invasive sampling (Q145072) (← links)
- Perissodactyla diet (Q145394) (← links)
- Effects of feral horse herds on plant communities across a precipitation gradient (Q145439) (← links)
- Effects of elk and bison herbivory on narrowleaf cottonwood (Q145753) (← links)
- Using fecal DNA and closed-capture models to estimate feral horse population size (Q145785) (← links)
- Feral horse space use and genetic characteristics from fecal DNA (Q146302) (← links)
- Bighorn sheep (<i>Ovis canadensis</i>) survivorship and habitat studies in Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area and surrounding lands, Wyoming and Montana, 2000–2003 (Q148539) (← links)
- Application of a hybrid model to reduce bias and improve precision in population estimates for elk (Cervus elaphus) inhabiting a cold desert ecosystem (Q151579) (← links)
- Habitat and diet of equids (Q152774) (← links)
- Can ruderal components of biocrust (mosses and cyanobacteria) be maintained under increasing threats of drought, grazing and feral horses? (Q226812) (← links)
- Wild horse and livestock influences on vegetation and wildlife in sagebrush ecosystems: Implications for refining and validating Appropriate Management Level (AML) (Q227027) (← links)
- Herbivore-Ecosystem Interactions (Q229751) (← links)
- Where the Bison Roam: Public-Private Partnership Supports Potential Restoration (Q229752) (← links)
- Non-invasive Genetic Sampling of Free-roaming Horses to Estimate Population Size, Genetic Diversity, and Consumption of Invasive Species (Q229772) (← links)
- Elk and Bison Grazing Ecology in the San Luis Valley, Colorado (Q229847) (← links)
- Wild Horse and Burro Population Management (Q229849) (← links)
- America's Wild Horses and Burros—Research to Support Management (Q229867) (← links)
- Selection of vegetation types and density of bison in an arid ecosystem (Q234303) (← links)
- Estimating bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) abundance using noninvasive sampling at a mineral lick within a National Park Wilderness Area (Q234985) (← links)
- Influence of nonnative and native ungulate biomass and seasonal precipitation on vegetation production in a Great Basin ecosystem (Q236901) (← links)
- Practical bias correction in aerial surveys of large mammals: Validation of hybrid double-observer with sightability method against known abundance of feral horse (Equus caballus) populations (Q238772) (← links)
- Revisions of rump fat and body scoring indices for deer, elk, and moose (Q248095) (← links)
- Ungulate herbivory on alpine willow in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of Colorado (Q250594) (← links)
- Evaluation of the impacts of radio-marking devices on feral horses and burros in a captive setting (Q253464) (← links)
- Comparison of methods to examine diet of feral horses from non-invasively collected fecal samples (Q255645) (← links)
- Comparison of aerial thermal infrared imagery and helicopter surveys of bison (Bison bison) in Grand Canyon National Park, USA (Q256033) (← links)
- Accounting for residual heterogeneity in double-observer sightability models decreases bias in burro abundance estimates (Q262328) (← links)
- Body size and digestive system shape resource selection by ungulates: A cross-taxa test of the forage maturation hypothesis (Q265084) (← links)
- Proximate factors affecting mortality and maternal abandonment of young free-roaming feral horse foals (Q267471) (← links)
- Browsers or Grazers? New insights into feral burro diet using a non-invasive sampling and plant DNA metabarcoding approach (Q270908) (← links)
- Ecology of bison, elk, and vegetation in an arid ecosystem (Q270935) (← links)
- Can grazing by elk and bison stimulate herbaceous plant productivity in semiarid ecosystems? (Q276919) (← links)
- PopEquus: a predictive modeling tool to support management decisions for free-roaming horse populations (Q277510) (← links)
- Rainfall reduces the potential for competitive suppression of a globally endangered ungulate by livestock (Q281059) (← links)
- Effects of elk herbivory on vegetation and nitrogen processes (Q283139) (← links)
- Seasonal resource selection and movement ecology of free-ranging horses in the western United States (Q292998) (← links)
- Potential spread of cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum) by feral horses (Equus ferus caballus) in Western Colorado (Q294108) (← links)
- Application of tail transmitters for tracking feral horses as an alternative to radio collars (Q307634) (← links)
- Comparing methods to estimate feral burro abundance (Q308137) (← links)
- Effect of adult male sterilization on the behavior and social associations of a feral polygynous ungulate: The horse (Q308216) (← links)
- An animal location-based habitat suitability model for bighorn sheep and wild horses in Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area and the Pryor Mountain Wild Horse Range, Montana, and Wyoming (Q309420) (← links)
- The Associate Editor in the peer review process—what's that? (Q312162) (← links)