Modern wildlife management has dual mandates to reduce human-wildlife conflict (HWC) for burgeoning populations of people while supporting conservation of biodiversity and the ecosystem functions it affords. These opposing goals can sometimes be achieved with non-lethal intervention tools that promote coexistence between people and wildlife. One such tool is conditioned taste aversion (CTA), the application of an evolutionary relevant learning paradigm in which an animal associates a transitory illness to the taste, odor or other characteristic of a particular food item, resulting in a long-term change in its perception of palatability. Despite extensive support for the power of CTA in laboratory studies, field studies have exhibited mixed ...
Human-wildlife conflicts typically involve fundamental processes associated with the feeding behavio...
Human-wildlife conflicts typically involve fundamental processes associated with the feeding behavio...
Paper presented at the "Symposium on Ingestion of Poisonous Plants by Livestock," February 15, 1990,...
Resumen del trabajo presentado al 12th International Mammalogical Congress (IMC): "Advances in mamma...
Flavor aversion learning (FAL) occurs experimentally when a mammal is presented with a distinctive-f...
© 2018 Elsevier B.V. Conditioned taste aversion is an emerging conservation tool that can be used to...
Abstract Predation by invasive mammalian species is one of the key drivers of native species' popula...
Flavor aversion learning (FAL) occurs experimentally when a mammal is presented with a distinctive-f...
Studies in taste aversion learning are typically of the following designs An animal is made to consu...
Although bait shyness has long been recognized as a problem to be overcome in the control of vertebr...
Globally, native predators and scavengers are threatened through the incidence of illegal poisoning ...
Barbey larkspur (Delphinium barbeyi L. Huth) is a palatable poisonous plant that causes a large numb...
Barbey larkspur (Delphinium barbeyi L. Huth) is a palatable poisonous plant that causes a large numb...
Barbey larkspur (Delphinium barbeyi L. Huth) is a palatable poisonous plant that causes a large numb...
Barbey larkspur (Delphinium barbeyi L. Huth) is a palatable poisonous plant that causes a large numb...
Human-wildlife conflicts typically involve fundamental processes associated with the feeding behavio...
Human-wildlife conflicts typically involve fundamental processes associated with the feeding behavio...
Paper presented at the "Symposium on Ingestion of Poisonous Plants by Livestock," February 15, 1990,...
Resumen del trabajo presentado al 12th International Mammalogical Congress (IMC): "Advances in mamma...
Flavor aversion learning (FAL) occurs experimentally when a mammal is presented with a distinctive-f...
© 2018 Elsevier B.V. Conditioned taste aversion is an emerging conservation tool that can be used to...
Abstract Predation by invasive mammalian species is one of the key drivers of native species' popula...
Flavor aversion learning (FAL) occurs experimentally when a mammal is presented with a distinctive-f...
Studies in taste aversion learning are typically of the following designs An animal is made to consu...
Although bait shyness has long been recognized as a problem to be overcome in the control of vertebr...
Globally, native predators and scavengers are threatened through the incidence of illegal poisoning ...
Barbey larkspur (Delphinium barbeyi L. Huth) is a palatable poisonous plant that causes a large numb...
Barbey larkspur (Delphinium barbeyi L. Huth) is a palatable poisonous plant that causes a large numb...
Barbey larkspur (Delphinium barbeyi L. Huth) is a palatable poisonous plant that causes a large numb...
Barbey larkspur (Delphinium barbeyi L. Huth) is a palatable poisonous plant that causes a large numb...
Human-wildlife conflicts typically involve fundamental processes associated with the feeding behavio...
Human-wildlife conflicts typically involve fundamental processes associated with the feeding behavio...
Paper presented at the "Symposium on Ingestion of Poisonous Plants by Livestock," February 15, 1990,...