Fig. 1 in Behavioral plasticity in a variable environment: snow depth and habitat interactions drive deer movement in winter

Fig. 1.—Differences in winter forage biomass (total, shrubs, and forbs, in kg/ha) among vegetation classes in the study area on Prince of Wales Island. Vegetation classes are a) old-growth forest types, shown for low-volume, medium-volume, and high-volume types, and b) 2nd-growth forest types, shown...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gilbert, Sophie L., Hundertmark, Kris J., Person, David K., Lindberg, Mark S., Boyce, Mark S.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2017
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10655708
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Summary:Fig. 1.—Differences in winter forage biomass (total, shrubs, and forbs, in kg/ha) among vegetation classes in the study area on Prince of Wales Island. Vegetation classes are a) old-growth forest types, shown for low-volume, medium-volume, and high-volume types, and b) 2nd-growth forest types, shown for age classes 0–65 years after original timber harvest. Values were derived from the published FRESH forage model (Hanley et al. 2012). Published as part of Gilbert, Sophie L., Hundertmark, Kris J., Person, David K., Lindberg, Mark S. & Boyce, Mark S., 2017, Behavioral plasticity in a variable environment: snow depth and habitat interactions drive deer movement in winter, pp. 246-259 in Journal of Mammalogy 98 (1) on page 247, DOI:10.1093/jmammal/gyw167, http://zenodo.org/record/10655706