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Moose-Wilson Corridor Use Levels, Type, Patterns And Impacts In Grand Teton National Park- Summer/Fall 2014 Technical Report, Christopher Monz, A. D'Antonio, K. Heaslip
Moose-Wilson Corridor Use Levels, Type, Patterns And Impacts In Grand Teton National Park- Summer/Fall 2014 Technical Report, Christopher Monz, A. D'Antonio, K. Heaslip
Christopher Monz
No abstract provided.
An Application Of Recreation Resource Assessment Techniques To Inform Management Action In An Urban-Proximate Natural Area, Ashley D'Antonio, Christopher Monz, Nell Larson, Amy Rohman
An Application Of Recreation Resource Assessment Techniques To Inform Management Action In An Urban-Proximate Natural Area, Ashley D'Antonio, Christopher Monz, Nell Larson, Amy Rohman
Christopher Monz
No abstract provided.
The Ecological Implications Of Visitor Transportation In Parks And Protected Areas: Examples From Research In Us National Parks, Christopher Monz, Ashley D'Antonio, Steve Lawson, Jesse Barber, Peter Newman
The Ecological Implications Of Visitor Transportation In Parks And Protected Areas: Examples From Research In Us National Parks, Christopher Monz, Ashley D'Antonio, Steve Lawson, Jesse Barber, Peter Newman
Christopher Monz
The demand for recreation and nature-based tourism experiences in parks and protected areas continues to grow in many locations worldwide and in response, many parks are employing transit services designed to improve visitor access. Transit services (e.g., public bus service) are a component of the overall park transportation system and are very desirable in park settings as they yield many advantages over personal auto access including reduced congestion in parking areas, reduced carbon footprint, and an enhanced visitor experience. However, a growing body of research also suggests that the delivery of visitors via transit to destinations within a park or …
Contrasting Effects Of Different Mammalian Herbivores On Sagebrush Plant Communities, Kari E. Veblen
Contrasting Effects Of Different Mammalian Herbivores On Sagebrush Plant Communities, Kari E. Veblen
Kari E. Veblen
Herbivory by both grazing and browsing ungulates shapes the structure and functioning of terrestrial ecosystems worldwide, and both types of herbivory have been implicated in major ecosystem state changes. Despite the ecological consequences of differences in diets and feeding habits among herbivores, studies that experimentally distinguish effects of grazing from spatially co-occurring, but temporally segregated browsing are extremely rare. Here we use a set of long-term exclosures in northern Utah, USA, to determine how domestic grazers vs. wild ungulate herbivores (including browsers and mixed feeders) affect sagebrush-dominated plant communities that historically covered ~62 million ha in North America. We sampled …