Next: Creative Commons License
Up: Population Viability Analysis Northern
Previous: A Metapopulation Approach
- 1
-
G. F. Barrowclough, R. J. Gutierrez, and Jeffrey G. Groth.
Phylogeography of spotted owl (Strix occidentalis)
populations based on mitochondrial DNA sequences: Gene flow, genetic
structure, and a novel biogeographic pattern.
Evolution, 53:919-931, 1999.
- 2
-
K. P. Burnham, D. R. Anderson, and G. C. White.
Estimation of vital rates of the northern spotted owl.
In Final Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement on
Management of Habitat for Late-Successional and Old-Growth Forest Related
Species within the range of the Northern Spotted Owl, volume II -
Appendices, pages J3-J26. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service,
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management, Portland, OR,
1994.
- 3
-
J. S. Clark.
Uncertainty and variability in demography and population growth: a
hierarchical approach.
Ecology, 84:1370-1381, 2003.
- 4
-
R. Lande.
Demographic models of the northern spotted owl (Strix
occidentalis caurina).
Oecologia, 75:601-607, 1988.
- 5
-
Barry R. Noon and Jennifer A. Blakesley.
Conservation of the northern spotted owl under the northwest forest
plan.
Conservation Biology, 20(2):288-296, 2006.
- 6
-
Barry R. Noon and Kevin S. McKelvey.
Management of the spotted owl: a case history in conservation
biology.
Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 27:135-162, 1996.
- 7
-
Barbara L. Taylor and Tim Gerrodette.
The uses of statistical power in conservation biology: the vaquita
and northern spotted owl.
Conservation Biology, 7:489-500, 1993.
Kent Holsinger