Trace mineral imbalances can have significant effects on animal health, reproductive success, and survival. Monitoring their status in wildlife populations is, therefore, important for management and conservation. Typically, livers and kidneys are sampled to measure mineral status, but biopsies and lethal-sampling are not always possible, particularly for Species at Risk. We aimed to: 1) determine baseline mineral levels in Northern Mountain caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou; Gmelin, 1788) in northwestern British Columbia, Canada, and 2) determine if hair can be used as an effective indicator of caribou mineral status by evaluating associations between hair and organ mineral concentrations. Hair, liver, and kidney samples from adult male c...
The province of Nova Scotia is considered to have two moose (Alces alces) populations. In 2003, the ...
ABSTRACT. Caribou is an important source of protein in the diet of northern Canadians. It is also an...
Mountain caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) are endangered in British Columbia and motorized backco...
The tight linkage between mineral status and health and demographics in animals is well documented. ...
Foraging is a key behaviour, and several aspects of foraging remain to be investigated in many wild ...
Aluminum, nickel, cadmium, mercury, and lead concentrations were measured in the kidney tissue of kn...
Abstract Assessing wildlife health in remote regions requires a multi-faceted approach, which common...
The province of Nova Scotia is considered to have two distinct moose populations: mainland and Cape ...
Human-caused ecological change negatively affects the sustainability of many wildlife populations bu...
The return to pasture use as an alternative to intensive livestock farming implies some risks with t...
Minerals (Na, K, Cl, Ca, P, Mg) and crude protein concentrations as well as total contents were meas...
Caribou (Rangifer tarandus) are an important ecological, cultural and economic resource in Yukon, Ca...
The central question of this thesis is to assess whether concentrations of mineral nutrients in Alas...
Differences in radionuclide and heavy metal concentrations found in the kidneys of barren-ground car...
It has been shown that environmental contaminants such as metals and organochlorines (OC) have the p...
The province of Nova Scotia is considered to have two moose (Alces alces) populations. In 2003, the ...
ABSTRACT. Caribou is an important source of protein in the diet of northern Canadians. It is also an...
Mountain caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) are endangered in British Columbia and motorized backco...
The tight linkage between mineral status and health and demographics in animals is well documented. ...
Foraging is a key behaviour, and several aspects of foraging remain to be investigated in many wild ...
Aluminum, nickel, cadmium, mercury, and lead concentrations were measured in the kidney tissue of kn...
Abstract Assessing wildlife health in remote regions requires a multi-faceted approach, which common...
The province of Nova Scotia is considered to have two distinct moose populations: mainland and Cape ...
Human-caused ecological change negatively affects the sustainability of many wildlife populations bu...
The return to pasture use as an alternative to intensive livestock farming implies some risks with t...
Minerals (Na, K, Cl, Ca, P, Mg) and crude protein concentrations as well as total contents were meas...
Caribou (Rangifer tarandus) are an important ecological, cultural and economic resource in Yukon, Ca...
The central question of this thesis is to assess whether concentrations of mineral nutrients in Alas...
Differences in radionuclide and heavy metal concentrations found in the kidneys of barren-ground car...
It has been shown that environmental contaminants such as metals and organochlorines (OC) have the p...
The province of Nova Scotia is considered to have two moose (Alces alces) populations. In 2003, the ...
ABSTRACT. Caribou is an important source of protein in the diet of northern Canadians. It is also an...
Mountain caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) are endangered in British Columbia and motorized backco...