Fort A.P. Hill (APH) is a 30,329 ha military training installation (U.S. Army) located in the upper Coastal Plain of Caroline County, Virginia. It was formed in 1941 and named in honor of Civil War Confederate Lt. General Ambrose Powell Hill. The current landscape includes a mosaic of habitats that range from old fields to hardwood forests. Forty species of mammals are known to exist on or near the installation. These include one marsupial, five insectivores, 9 chiropterans, one lagomorph, 12 rodents, 10 carnivores, and one cervid. We have studied many of the species on APH since 1997. In this paper we describe the physical environment of the area and 7 important habitats used by mammals. We also summarize the ecology and natural history of...
The Eastern Harvest Mouse, Reithrodontomys humulis, has been studied extensively in southeastern Vir...
Loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantations of four different ages were examined to identify changes ...
The effects on biological communities of human-induced disturbances such as road construction for lo...
Fort A.P. Hill (APH) is a 30,329 ha military training installation (U.S. Army) located in the upper ...
This publication is designed to function as a tool for the identification of mammal species that occ...
We compared small mammal communities between riparian (stream corridor) and nearby upland habitats i...
Mammals encountered today in Virginia’s forests and fields include native and nonnative species, fer...
We assessed the status of furbearing mammals on Fort A.P. Hill, Caroline County, Virginia during the...
Changes in the composition of two small mammal communities were studied during 8 and 9 years of ecol...
In a study conducted in mid-winter, pitfall traps were used to assess the small mammal communities o...
The Sandhills Region of Nebraska is located in the central and northern portion of Nebraska. Within ...
Mountaintop mine/valley fill is a large-scale form of strip mining whose effects on small mammals ha...
Juniperus virginiana L. (Eastern Red Cedar) is a fire-intolerant tree species that has been invading...
The Eastern Harvest Mouse, Reithrodontomys humulis, has been studied extensively in southeastern Vir...
Loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantations of four different ages were examined to identify changes ...
The effects on biological communities of human-induced disturbances such as road construction for lo...
Fort A.P. Hill (APH) is a 30,329 ha military training installation (U.S. Army) located in the upper ...
This publication is designed to function as a tool for the identification of mammal species that occ...
We compared small mammal communities between riparian (stream corridor) and nearby upland habitats i...
Mammals encountered today in Virginia’s forests and fields include native and nonnative species, fer...
We assessed the status of furbearing mammals on Fort A.P. Hill, Caroline County, Virginia during the...
Changes in the composition of two small mammal communities were studied during 8 and 9 years of ecol...
In a study conducted in mid-winter, pitfall traps were used to assess the small mammal communities o...
The Sandhills Region of Nebraska is located in the central and northern portion of Nebraska. Within ...
Mountaintop mine/valley fill is a large-scale form of strip mining whose effects on small mammals ha...
Juniperus virginiana L. (Eastern Red Cedar) is a fire-intolerant tree species that has been invading...
The Eastern Harvest Mouse, Reithrodontomys humulis, has been studied extensively in southeastern Vir...
Loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantations of four different ages were examined to identify changes ...
The effects on biological communities of human-induced disturbances such as road construction for lo...