Counting the ghosts of the mountains: sampling snow leopard populations at large spatial scales – The Applied Ecologist
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…
Wolverines (Gulo gulo) in a changing landscape and warming climate: A decadal synthesis of global conservation ecology research - ScienceDirect
Don't go chasing the ghosts of the past: habitat selection and site fidelity during calving in an Arctic ungulate
Estimating snow leopard and prey populations at large spatial scales
Big Cats, Big Territories by Montana Outdoors - Issuu
Artificial intelligence for automated detection of large mammals creates path to upscale drone surveys
An empirical demonstration of the effect of study design on density estimations
Pronghorn SpringerLink
Identification errors in camera-trap studies result in systematic population overestimation
Noninvasive Genetics and Genomics Shed Light on the Status, Phylogeography, and Evolution of the Elusive Snow Leopard
Frontiers Future Directions in Conservation Research on Petrels and Shearwaters
Using heterogeneous camera-trapping sites to obtain the first density estimates for the transboundary Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx) population in the Dinaric Mountains
Ghost of the Mountains