The relationship between selection at coarse and fine spatiotemporal spatial scales is still poorly understood. Some authors claim that, to accommodate different needs at different scales, individuals should have contrasting selection patterns at different scales of selection, while others claim that coarse scale selection patterns should reflect fine scale selection decisions. Here we examine site selection by 110 woodland caribou equipped with GPS radio‐collars with respect to forage availability and predation risk across a broad gradient in availability of both variables in boreal forests of Northern Ontario. We tested whether caribou selection for forage and avoidance of risk was consistent between coarse (seasonal home range) and fine ...
Woodland caribou may be an important indicator' or focal species for management agencies because the...
1. Understanding why heterogeneity exists in animal-habitat spatial relationships is critical for id...
Resource selection is a dynamic behavioural process by which individuals choose resource units (e.g....
Habitat selection is a multi-scaled phenomenon. Selection depends on the scales perceived by organis...
A central assumption underlying niche theory and the study of habitat selection is that selected hab...
Multi-scale selection patterns can be understood from two perspectives: coarse scale patterns as the...
The ideal free distribution assumes that animals select habitats that are beneficial to their fitnes...
Habitat selection has been described as a hierarchical process that may yield various patterns depen...
<div><p>Many animal species exhibit broad-scale latitudinal or longitudinal gradients in their respo...
Woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) populations are declining worldwide, and predation is c...
Multi-scale resource selection modeling is used to identify factors that limit species distributions...
Habitat selection is a multi-level, hierarchical process that should be a key component in the balan...
Many animal species exhibit broad-scale latitudinal or longitudinal gradients in their response to b...
Resource selection functions are useful tools for land-use planning, especially for wide-ranging spe...
This research suggests that mountain caribou select a suite of winter habitats, at multiple spatial ...
Woodland caribou may be an important indicator' or focal species for management agencies because the...
1. Understanding why heterogeneity exists in animal-habitat spatial relationships is critical for id...
Resource selection is a dynamic behavioural process by which individuals choose resource units (e.g....
Habitat selection is a multi-scaled phenomenon. Selection depends on the scales perceived by organis...
A central assumption underlying niche theory and the study of habitat selection is that selected hab...
Multi-scale selection patterns can be understood from two perspectives: coarse scale patterns as the...
The ideal free distribution assumes that animals select habitats that are beneficial to their fitnes...
Habitat selection has been described as a hierarchical process that may yield various patterns depen...
<div><p>Many animal species exhibit broad-scale latitudinal or longitudinal gradients in their respo...
Woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) populations are declining worldwide, and predation is c...
Multi-scale resource selection modeling is used to identify factors that limit species distributions...
Habitat selection is a multi-level, hierarchical process that should be a key component in the balan...
Many animal species exhibit broad-scale latitudinal or longitudinal gradients in their response to b...
Resource selection functions are useful tools for land-use planning, especially for wide-ranging spe...
This research suggests that mountain caribou select a suite of winter habitats, at multiple spatial ...
Woodland caribou may be an important indicator' or focal species for management agencies because the...
1. Understanding why heterogeneity exists in animal-habitat spatial relationships is critical for id...
Resource selection is a dynamic behavioural process by which individuals choose resource units (e.g....