Wildlife managers have long recognized that management goals must be constrained by the availability and suitability of habitat. This recognition, combined with ever increasing land development pressures, has resulted in environmental legislation emphasizing systematic approaches to collection and analysis of habitat information. Wildlife planners have responded with a variety of approaches to the development of models that quantify habitat requirements
Effolts to mitigate wildlife-human conflicts tpically involve management of unacceptably abundant po...
‘‘Strategic habitat conservation’’ refers to a process used by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to...
Habitat loss from land-use change is one of the top causes of declines in wildlife species of concer...
Comprehensive planning and management of natural resources require the assessment of existing and fu...
Ecologists and wildlife managers are increasingly confronted with the problems of predicting the val...
For many years prior to 1969, wildlife was essentially defined, in the practice of governmental bodi...
The purpose of a Habitat Management Plan is to use the best available science, within an adaptive fr...
This Forestry and Natural Resources Fact Sheet 1 by Clemson University Extension Services provides i...
We demonstrate an approach to integrated land-management planning and quantify differences in vegeta...
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appe...
The National Forest Management Act (NFMA) of 1976 (16 U .S.c. 1600) requires that each National Fore...
Man has a great effect upon wildlife. Many of man\u27s activities have produced vast changes on the ...
This Forestry and Natural Resources Fact Sheet 24 by Clemson University Extension Services gives inf...
The 1970s was a decade of increased awareness of environmental problems, and emphasis was placed on ...
Allocation of our world’s natural resources will become increasingly important as the human populati...
Effolts to mitigate wildlife-human conflicts tpically involve management of unacceptably abundant po...
‘‘Strategic habitat conservation’’ refers to a process used by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to...
Habitat loss from land-use change is one of the top causes of declines in wildlife species of concer...
Comprehensive planning and management of natural resources require the assessment of existing and fu...
Ecologists and wildlife managers are increasingly confronted with the problems of predicting the val...
For many years prior to 1969, wildlife was essentially defined, in the practice of governmental bodi...
The purpose of a Habitat Management Plan is to use the best available science, within an adaptive fr...
This Forestry and Natural Resources Fact Sheet 1 by Clemson University Extension Services provides i...
We demonstrate an approach to integrated land-management planning and quantify differences in vegeta...
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appe...
The National Forest Management Act (NFMA) of 1976 (16 U .S.c. 1600) requires that each National Fore...
Man has a great effect upon wildlife. Many of man\u27s activities have produced vast changes on the ...
This Forestry and Natural Resources Fact Sheet 24 by Clemson University Extension Services gives inf...
The 1970s was a decade of increased awareness of environmental problems, and emphasis was placed on ...
Allocation of our world’s natural resources will become increasingly important as the human populati...
Effolts to mitigate wildlife-human conflicts tpically involve management of unacceptably abundant po...
‘‘Strategic habitat conservation’’ refers to a process used by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to...
Habitat loss from land-use change is one of the top causes of declines in wildlife species of concer...