Canada Lynx in the Great Lakes Region

Literature Cited

Note: citations on the “Canada lynx in the Great Lakes Region” web pages are listed here in alphabetical order. If a citation seems to be missing, feel free to contact us by email or using the contacts listed in about us.

Aebischer, N. J., P. A. Robertson, and R. E. Kenward. 1993. Compositional analysis of habitat use from animal radiotracking data. Ecology 74:1313-1325.

Aubry, K. B., G. M. Koehler, and J. R. Squires. 2000. Ecology of Canada lynx in southern boreal forests. Pages 373-396 in lf Ruggiero, K. B. Aubry, S. W. Buskirk, G. M. Koehler, C. J. Krebs, K. S. McKelvey and J. R. Squires, editors. Ecology and conservation of lynx in the United States. University Press of Colorado, Denver, CO.

Bayne, E., and K. Hobson. 2000. Relative use of contiquous and fragmented boreal forest by red squirrels. Canadian Journal of Zoology 78:359-365.

Brand, C. J., L. B. Keith, and C. A. Fischer. 1976. Lynx responses to changing snowshoe hare densities in central Alberta. Journal of Wildlife Management 40:416-428.

Buskirk, S. 2000. Habitat fragmentation and interspecific competition: implications for lynx conservation. Pages 83-100 in L. F. Ruggiero, K. B. Aubry, S. W. Buskirk, G. M. Koehler, C. J. Krebs, K. S. McKelvey and J. R. Squires, editors. Ecology and conservation of lynx in the United States. University Press of Colorado, Denver.

Chamberlain, M. J., and B. D. Leopold. 2000. Spatial use patterns, seasonal habitat selection, and interactions among adult gray foxes in Mississippi. Journal of Wildlife Management 64:742-751.

Chamberlain, M., B. D. Leopold, and L. M. Conner. 2003. Space use, movements and habitat selection of adult bobcats (Lynx rufus) in central Mississippi. Am. Midl. Nat. 149:395-405.

Conner, L. M., M. D. Smith, and L. W. Burger. 2003. A comparison of distance-based and classification-based analyses of habitat use. Ecology 84:526-531.

Dickson, B. G., and P. Beier. 2002. Home-range and habitat selection by adult cougars in southern California. Journal of Wildlife Management 66:1235-1245.

Elton, C., and M. Nicholson. 1942. The ten-year cycle in numbers of the lynx in Canada. Journal of Animal Ecology 11:215-244.

Garshelis, D. L. 2000. Delusions in habitat evaluation: measuring use, selection, and importance. Pages 111-164 in L. Boitani and T. K. Fuller, editors. Research techniques in animal ecology: controversies and consequences. Columbia University Press, New York.

Gore, J. A., and W. A. Patterson III. 1986. Mass of downed wood in northern hardwood forests in New Hampshire: potential effects of forest management. Canadian Journal Of Forest Research 16:335-339.

Hanowski, J. M., and G. J. Niemi. 1995. Experimental design considerations for establishing an off-road habitat specific bird monitoring program using point counts. U.S.D.A Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. PSW-GTR-149. pp. 145-150.

Heisey, D. M., and T. K. Fuller. 1985. Evaluation of survival and cause-specific mortality rates using telemetry data. Journal of Wildlife Management 49:668-674.

Henderson, C. 1978. Minnesota Canada Lynx report, 1977. Minnesota Wildlife Research Quarterly 38:221-242.

Howe, R. W., G. J. Niemi, S. J. Lewis, and D. A. Welsh. 1998. A standard method for monitoring bird populations in the Great Lakes Region. Passenger Pigeon 59:183-194.

Johnson, C. J., K. L. Parker, and D. C. Heard. 2002a. Foraging across a variable landscape: behavioral decisions made by woodland caribou at multiple spatial scales. Oecologia 127:590-602.

Johnson, C. J., K. L. Parker, D. C. Heard, and M. P. Gillingham. 2002b. A multiscale behavioral approach to understanding the movements of caribou. Ecological Applications 12:1840-1860.

Johnson, D. H. 1980. The comparison of usage and availability measurements for evaluating resource preference. Ecology 61:65-71.

Johnson, W. E., E. Eizirik, M. Roelke-Parker, and S. J. O'Brien. 2001. Applications of genetic concepts and molecular methods to carnivore conservation. Pages 335-358 in J. L. Gittleman, S. M. Funk, D. MacDonald and R. K. Wayne, editors. Carnivore conservation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Kaplan, E. L., and P. Meier. 1958. Nonparametric estimation from incomplete observations. Journal of the American Stastistical Association 53:457-481.

Keith, L. B. 1963. Wildlife's ten year cycle. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, WI.

Kenward, R. E. 1992. Quantity versus quality: programmed collection and analysis of radiotracking data. Pages 231-246 in I. G. Priede and S. M. Swift, editors. Wildlife Telemetry: remote monitoring and tracking of animals. Ellis Horwood,, Chichester, England.

Kenward, R. E., and K. H. Hodder. 1996. Ranges V: an analysis system for biological location data. Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, Furzebrook Research Station, Wareham, Dorset, UK.

Kernohan, B. J., R. A. Gitzen, and J. J. Millspaugh. 2001. Analysis of animal space use and movements. Pages 125-166 in J. J. Millspaugh and J. M. Marzluff, editors. Radio tracking and animal populations. Academic press, San Diego, CA.

Koehler, G. M. 1990. Population and habitat characteristics of lynx and snowshoe hares in north central Washington. Canadian Journal of Zoology 68:845-851.

Krebs, C. J., B. S. Gilbert, S. Boutin, and R. Boonstra. 1987. Estimation of snowshoe hare population density from turd transects. Canadian Journal of Zoology 65:565-567.

Krebs, C. J., R. Boonstra, V. Nams, M. O'Donoghue, K. E. Hodges, and S. Boutin. 2001a. Estimating snowshoe hare population density from pellet plots: a further evaluation. Canadian Journal of Zoology 79:1-4.

Krebs, C. J., S. Boutin, and R. Boonstra. 2001b. Ecosystem dynamics of the boreal forest. Oxford University Press, Inc., New York.

Kurkki, S., A. Nikula, P. Helle, and H. Linden. 1998. Abundances of red fox and pine marten in relation to the composition of boreal forest landscapes. Journal of Animal Ecology 67:874-886.

Linden, H., E. Helle, P. Helle, and M. Wikman. 1996. Wildlife triangle scheme in Finland: methods and aims for monitoring wildife populations. Finnish Game Research 49:4-11.

MacDonald, D. W., F. G. Ball, and N. G. Hough. 1980. The evaluation of home range size and configuration using radio-tracking data. Pages 405-424 in C. J. Amlaner Jr. and D. W. MacDonald, editors. A handbook on biotelemetry and radiotracking. Pergamon Press, Oxford, England.

Mattson, D. J., and D. P. Reinhart. 1996. Indicators of red squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) abundance in the whitebark pine zone. Great Basin Naturalist 56:272-275.

Mayfield, H. 1961. Nesting success calculated from exposure. Wilson Bulletin 73:255-261.

Mayfield, H. 1975. Suggestions for calculating nest success. Wilson Bulletin 87:456-466.

McKelvey, K. S., kb Aubry, and Y. K. Ortega. 2000a. History and distribution of lynx in the contiguous United States. Pages 207-264 in lf Ruggiero, K. B. Aubry, S. W. Buskirk, G. M. Koehler, C. J. Krebs, K. S. McKelvey and J. R. Squires, editors. Ecology and conservation of lynx in the United States. University Press of Colorado, Denver, CO.

McKelvey, K. S., Y. K. Ortega, G. M. Koehler, K. B. Aubry, and J. D. Brittell. 2000b. Canada lynx habitat and topographic use patterns in north central Washington: a reanalysis. Pages 307-336 in L. F. Ruggiero, K. B. Aubry, S. W. Buskirk, G. M. Koehler, C. J. Krebs, K. S. McKelvey and J. R. Squires, editors. Ecology and conservation of lynx in the United States. University Press of Colorado, Denver, CO.

McKelvey, K. S., G. W. McDaniel, L. S. Mills, and P. C. Griffin. 2002. Effects of plot size and shape on pellet density estimates for snowshoe hares. Wildlife Society Bulletin 30:751-755.

Mech, L. D. 1973. Canadian lynx invasion of Minnesota. Biological Conservation 5:151-152.

Mech, L. D. 1977. Record movement of a Canadian lynx. Journal of Mammalogy 58:676-677.

Mech, L. D. 1980. Age, sex, and reproduction, and spatial organization of lynxes colonizing northeastern Minnesota. Journal of Mammalogy 61:261-267.

Mills, L. S., J. J. Citta, K. P. Lair, M. K. Swatz, and D. A. Tallmon. 2001. Estimating animal abundance using noninvasive DNA sampling: promise and pitfalls. Ecological Applications 10:283-294.

Miquelle, D. G., E. N. Smirnov, T. W. Merrill, A. E. Myslenkov, H. B. Quigley, M. G. Hornocker, and B. Schleyer. 1999. Hierarchical spatial analysis of Amur tiger relationships to habitat and prey. Pages 71-99 in J. Seidensticker, S. Christie and P. Jackson, editors. Riding the tiger: tiger conservation in human dominated landscapes. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.

Moen, R., J. Pastor, Y. Cohen, and C. C. Schwartz. 1996. Effects of moose movement and habitat use on gps collar performance. Journal of Wildlife Management 60:659-668.

Moen, R., J. Pastor, and Y. Cohen. 1997. Accuracy of GPS telemetry collar locations with differential correction. Journal of Wildlife Management 61:530-539.

Morrison, M. L. 2001. A proposed research emphasis to overcome the limits of wildlife-habitat relationship studies. Journal of Wildlife Management 65:613-623.

Murray, D. L., J. D. Roth, E. Ellsworth, A. J. Wirsing, and T. D. Steury. 2002. Estimating low-density snowshoe hare populations using fecal pellet counts. Can. J. Zool.-Rev. Can. Zool. 80:771-781.

Myers, J. 2003. Crossbreed of bobcat, lynx found. Duluth News Tribune, June 3, 2003, pp. 1B and 2B.

Nellis, C. H., S. P. Wetmore, and L. B. Keith. 1972. Lynx-prey interactions in central Alberta. Journal of Wildlife Management 36:320-329.

Nielsen, C. K., and A. Woolf. 2002. Survival of unexploited bobcats in southern Illinois. Journal of Wildlife Management 66:833-838.

ODonoghue, M., S. Boutin, C. J. Krebs, and E. J. Hofer. 1997. Numerical responses of coyotes and lynx to the snowshoe hare cycle. Oikos 80:150-162.

O'Donoghue, M., S. Boutin, C. J. Krebs, D. L. Murray, and E. J. Hofer. 1998. Behavioural responses of coyotes and lynx to the snowshoe hare cycle. Oikos 82:169-183.

Pollock, K. H., S. R. Winterstein, C. M. Bunck, and P. D. Curtis. 1989a. Survial analysis in telemetry studies: the staggered entry design. Journal of Wildlife Management 53:7-15.

Pollock, K. H., S. R. Winterstien, and M. H. Conroy. 1989b. Estimation and analysis of survival distributions of radiotagged animals. Biometrics 45:99-109.

Poole, K. G. 1994. Characteristics of an unharvested lynx population during a snowshoe hare decline. Journal of Wildlife Management 58:608-618.

Poole, K. G. 1995. Spatial organization of a lynx population. Canadian Journal of Zoology 73:632-641.

Poole, K. G., L. A. Wakelyn, and P. N. Nicklen. 1996. habitat selection by lynx in the northwest territories. Canadian Journal of Zoology 74:845-850.

Powell, R. A. 2000. Animal home ranges and territories and home range estimation. Pages 65-110 in L. Boitani and T. K. Fuller, editors. Research techniques in animal ecology: controversies and consequences. Columbia University Press, New York.

Pullianen, E. 1980. Winter diet and movements of cervids A review. Memorial Society of Fauna and Flora Fennica 56:51-58.

Ruggiero, L. F., D. E. Pearson, and S. E. Henry. 1998. Characteristics of American marten den sites in wyoming. Journal of Wildlife Management 62:663-673.

Ruggiero, L. F., K. B. Aubry, S. W. Buskirk, G. M. Koehler, C. J. Krebs, K. S. McKelvey, and J. R. Squires. 2000. The scientific basis for lynx conservation: qualified insights. Pages 443-454 in lf Ruggiero, K. B. Aubry, S. W. Buskirk, G. M. Koehler, C. J. Krebs, K. S. McKelvey and J. R. Squires, editors. Ecology and conservation of lynx in the United States. University Press of Colorado, Denver, CO.

Schwartz, M. K., L. S. Mills, K. S. McKelvey, L. F. Ruggiero, and F. W. Allendorf. 2002. DNA reveals high dispersal synchronizing the population dynamics of Canada lynx. Nature 415:520-522.

Seaman, D. E., J. J. Millspaugh, B. J. Kernohan, G. C. Brundige, K. J. Raedeke, and R. A. Gitzen. 1999. Effects of sample size on kernel home range estimates. Journal of Wildlife Management. 63:739-747.

Slough, B. G., and G. Mowat. 1996. Lynx population dynamics in an untrapped refugium. Journal of Wildlife Management 60:946-961.

Squires, J. 2002. Snow-tracking protocol used to delineate lynx populations. Unpublished Manuscript, 10 pages.

Squires, J. R., and T. Laurion. 2000. Lynx home range and movements in Montana and Wyoming: preliminary results. Pages 337-350 in L. F. Ruggiero, K. B. Aubry, S. W. Buskirk, G. M. Koehler, C. J. Krebs, K. S. McKelvey and J. R. Squires, editors. Ecology and conservation of lynx in the United States. University Press of Colorado, Denver.

Thompson, F. R., III, and E. K. Fritzell. 1989. Habitat use, home range, and survival of territorial male ruffed grouse. Journal of Wildlife Management 53:15-21.

Thompson, I. D., I. J. Davidson, S. O'Donnell, and F. Brazeau. 1989. Use of track transects to measure the relative occurrence of some boreal mammals in uncut forest and regeneration stands. Canadian Journal of Zoology 67:1816-1823.

Todd, K. 2003. Tracking the snow cat. Sierra March/April:26-33.

Vashon, J., A. Vashon, and S. Crowley. 2003. Partnership for lynx conservation in Maine, Dec. 2001 - Dec. 2002 field report. Unpublished Report, Maine Dept. Inland Fish and Wildlife.

White, G. C., and R. A. Garrott. 1990. Analysis of Wildlife Radio-Tracking Data. Academic Press, San Diego.

Winterstein, S. R., K. H. Pollock, and C. M. Bunck. 2001. Analysis of survival data from radiotelemetry studies. Pages 351-380 in J. J. Millspaugh and J. M. Marzluff, editors. Radiotracking and animal populations. Academic Press, San Diego, CA.

Wolter, P. T., and M. A. White. 2002. Recent forest cover type transitions and landscape structural changes in northeast Minnesota, USA. Landscape Ecology 17:133-155.

Wolter, P. T., D. J. Mladenoff, G. E. Host, and T. R. Crow. 1995. Improved forest classification in the northern Lake States using multi-temporal Landsat imagery. Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing 61:1129-1143.

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