The Rewilding of New York's North Country: Beavers, Moose, Canines and the Adirondacks
This project examines the restoration histories of beavers (Castor canadensis), moose (Alces alces americana), and wild canines (Canis spp.) within the Adirondack Highlands of northern New York. Devastated by the depredations of nineteenth century woodsmen, the populations of these large mammals reb...
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University of Montana
2008
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ftunivmontana:oai:scholarworks.umt.edu:etd-2083 2023-07-16T03:51:28+02:00 The Rewilding of New York's North Country: Beavers, Moose, Canines and the Adirondacks Aagaard, Peter 2008-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/1064 https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/etd/article/2083/viewcontent/Aagaard_Peter_Thesis.pdf unknown University of Montana https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/1064 https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/etd/article/2083/viewcontent/Aagaard_Peter_Thesis.pdf ©2008 Peter Aagaard Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Adirondacks beavers coyotes moose restoration rewilding wolves thesis 2008 ftunivmontana 2023-06-27T22:39:41Z This project examines the restoration histories of beavers (Castor canadensis), moose (Alces alces americana), and wild canines (Canis spp.) within the Adirondack Highlands of northern New York. Devastated by the depredations of nineteenth century woodsmen, the populations of these large mammals rebounded during the twentieth century. Numbering fewer than ten in 1895, the Adirondacks’ remnant beaver population recolonized the region’s lakes, ponds, streams, and rivers over the next twenty-five years, assisted by the presence of prime habitat, a state-enforced moratorium on beaver trapping, and timely reinforcements. Hunters shot the last of the Adirondacks’ moose near Raquette Lake in 1861. Moose began returning naturally to the region during the second half of the twentieth century, dispersing into the Adirondack Highlands from the resurgent woodlands of Vermont. More than four hundred now inhabit northern New York. While the Adirondacks’ wolves outlasted the region’s moose, bounty-hunters had successfully eliminated canine predators by the early 1890s. But in the next four decades rapidly expanding coyote populations hybridized with wolves as they extended their range eastward around the Great Lakes. Capable of traveling through regions largely impermeable to wolves, coyote hybrids served as hardy vessels of wolf genetic material, interjecting wolf DNA from Canada back into the Adirondack Highlands. The entry and continued evolution of wolf-coyote hybrids within the Adirondack ecosystem thus represents a genetic, if not a physical, restoration. These unique restoration histories together illustrate the considerable resilience of the Adirondack ecosystem and its large mammal species, while providing valuable context for future rewilding efforts within the Northeastern woodlands. Thesis Alces alces University of Montana: ScholarWorks Canada Raquette Lake ENVELOPE(-113.085,-113.085,62.700,62.700) |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
University of Montana: ScholarWorks |
op_collection_id |
ftunivmontana |
language |
unknown |
topic |
Adirondacks beavers coyotes moose restoration rewilding wolves |
spellingShingle |
Adirondacks beavers coyotes moose restoration rewilding wolves Aagaard, Peter The Rewilding of New York's North Country: Beavers, Moose, Canines and the Adirondacks |
topic_facet |
Adirondacks beavers coyotes moose restoration rewilding wolves |
description |
This project examines the restoration histories of beavers (Castor canadensis), moose (Alces alces americana), and wild canines (Canis spp.) within the Adirondack Highlands of northern New York. Devastated by the depredations of nineteenth century woodsmen, the populations of these large mammals rebounded during the twentieth century. Numbering fewer than ten in 1895, the Adirondacks’ remnant beaver population recolonized the region’s lakes, ponds, streams, and rivers over the next twenty-five years, assisted by the presence of prime habitat, a state-enforced moratorium on beaver trapping, and timely reinforcements. Hunters shot the last of the Adirondacks’ moose near Raquette Lake in 1861. Moose began returning naturally to the region during the second half of the twentieth century, dispersing into the Adirondack Highlands from the resurgent woodlands of Vermont. More than four hundred now inhabit northern New York. While the Adirondacks’ wolves outlasted the region’s moose, bounty-hunters had successfully eliminated canine predators by the early 1890s. But in the next four decades rapidly expanding coyote populations hybridized with wolves as they extended their range eastward around the Great Lakes. Capable of traveling through regions largely impermeable to wolves, coyote hybrids served as hardy vessels of wolf genetic material, interjecting wolf DNA from Canada back into the Adirondack Highlands. The entry and continued evolution of wolf-coyote hybrids within the Adirondack ecosystem thus represents a genetic, if not a physical, restoration. These unique restoration histories together illustrate the considerable resilience of the Adirondack ecosystem and its large mammal species, while providing valuable context for future rewilding efforts within the Northeastern woodlands. |
format |
Thesis |
author |
Aagaard, Peter |
author_facet |
Aagaard, Peter |
author_sort |
Aagaard, Peter |
title |
The Rewilding of New York's North Country: Beavers, Moose, Canines and the Adirondacks |
title_short |
The Rewilding of New York's North Country: Beavers, Moose, Canines and the Adirondacks |
title_full |
The Rewilding of New York's North Country: Beavers, Moose, Canines and the Adirondacks |
title_fullStr |
The Rewilding of New York's North Country: Beavers, Moose, Canines and the Adirondacks |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Rewilding of New York's North Country: Beavers, Moose, Canines and the Adirondacks |
title_sort |
rewilding of new york's north country: beavers, moose, canines and the adirondacks |
publisher |
University of Montana |
publishDate |
2008 |
url |
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/1064 https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/etd/article/2083/viewcontent/Aagaard_Peter_Thesis.pdf |
long_lat |
ENVELOPE(-113.085,-113.085,62.700,62.700) |
geographic |
Canada Raquette Lake |
geographic_facet |
Canada Raquette Lake |
genre |
Alces alces |
genre_facet |
Alces alces |
op_source |
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers |
op_relation |
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/1064 https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/etd/article/2083/viewcontent/Aagaard_Peter_Thesis.pdf |
op_rights |
©2008 Peter Aagaard |
_version_ |
1771540979808993280 |