@WildliferSteph If they do control deer, my advice was to do it *after* wolf control, to prevent the #wolf population rebounding. Otherwise wolves may prey-switch entirely to #caribou, or moose.
Good research:
https://t.co/spmWVwtoZY
https://t.co/MIQyoJinyA
@Alexander_Lees @wildforest_matt @cogsy29 This is an interesting paper..
https://t.co/I1mEihEPe0
That, along with an article on Managing predators and prey by @Drystonesonnet encouraged me to write an earlier blog on the topic...
https://t.co/mhEEV7UeTA
@JZThinAir It was this that initially drew my attention (thanks @Wayfaringhind) and took me back to a much earlier twitter debate. How does this fit with the Serrouya et al. (2017) work on moose, wolves and caribou? https://t.co/CLMliZR0rr
@DuckChessy @NatGeoFrance C'est surtout à cause de l'exploitation arboricole.
Il y a aussi peut-être trop d'élans...article intéressant :
https://t.co/zIlYLIoksR
@MarkLRHall @erstlecocq @markhumeglobe It's complicated. There are far better people to comment on this than me, but here are a couple of papers on the topic.
https://t.co/rUMgF0n4Y4
https://t.co/dJY1hJIazl
@ClaytonTLamb @JimHandman @CaulfieldTim Plus, caribou in areas that've been cut no longer have lichens to sustain them, & moose move in bringing wolves w/: https://t.co/6oVxVQuASP