This research was designed to assess the impact of a hiking trail or a four wheel drive road on our three focal groups (plants, aquatic animals and small mammals). Analyses in 1990 revealed large differences in species abundances and some instances of presence/absence differences among the three focal groups. Differences occurred both between the road right of way per se and nonroaded sections of the canyon bottom and between roaded and nonroaded sections of the canyon bottom. In 1990 we sampled small mammals and plants for 2.4 km up and downstream of the road terminus. In May, June, and July 1991 we extended sampled areas to approximately 4.8 km up and downstream of the end of the four wheel drive road. We also sampled aquatic organis...
Conservationists have advocated the construction of wildlife crossing structures for the purpose of ...
As part of an ongoing ecological field investigation at Los Alamos National Laboratory, a study was ...
Campground use in our national parks is increasing yearly, but little quantitative data are availabl...
The effects of in-stream hiking on aquatic invertebrate assemblages were examined in the North Fork ...
Wilderness stream crossings used by mules, horses, and hikers are localized disturbances that may af...
Disturbance of ecosystems by road construction results in habitat fragmentation and edge effects. St...
A wide range of plant and wildlife species utilize water discharged from facilities at Los Alamos Na...
One of the most obvious impacts roads have on the natural world is direct mortality to individual an...
I assessed the activity pattern of small mammals and lizards in relation to three types of roads tra...
Our study focused on the putative effects of roads on small-mammal communities in a high desert regi...
In Australia, the adventure sport of canyoning occurs predominantly in the protected areas of the Gr...
Research questions and testable hypothesis Do riparian vegetation species assemblages change downstr...
There has been a recent emergence of “road ecology” as a science that looks at the overall impacts o...
Mammal activity was monitored by a track-analysis method, in a 180 ha forest fragment. Three 1 km tr...
Habitat connectivity is a key component for the persistence of populations, for maintaining genetic ...
Conservationists have advocated the construction of wildlife crossing structures for the purpose of ...
As part of an ongoing ecological field investigation at Los Alamos National Laboratory, a study was ...
Campground use in our national parks is increasing yearly, but little quantitative data are availabl...
The effects of in-stream hiking on aquatic invertebrate assemblages were examined in the North Fork ...
Wilderness stream crossings used by mules, horses, and hikers are localized disturbances that may af...
Disturbance of ecosystems by road construction results in habitat fragmentation and edge effects. St...
A wide range of plant and wildlife species utilize water discharged from facilities at Los Alamos Na...
One of the most obvious impacts roads have on the natural world is direct mortality to individual an...
I assessed the activity pattern of small mammals and lizards in relation to three types of roads tra...
Our study focused on the putative effects of roads on small-mammal communities in a high desert regi...
In Australia, the adventure sport of canyoning occurs predominantly in the protected areas of the Gr...
Research questions and testable hypothesis Do riparian vegetation species assemblages change downstr...
There has been a recent emergence of “road ecology” as a science that looks at the overall impacts o...
Mammal activity was monitored by a track-analysis method, in a 180 ha forest fragment. Three 1 km tr...
Habitat connectivity is a key component for the persistence of populations, for maintaining genetic ...
Conservationists have advocated the construction of wildlife crossing structures for the purpose of ...
As part of an ongoing ecological field investigation at Los Alamos National Laboratory, a study was ...
Campground use in our national parks is increasing yearly, but little quantitative data are availabl...