SufficeAsselinImbeauEtAl2017
Référence
Suffice, P., Asselin, H., Imbeau, L., Cheveau, M., Drapeau, P. (2017) More fishers and fewer martens due to cumulative effects of forest management and climate change as evidenced from local knowledge. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine, 13(1):51. (URL )
Résumé
Monitoring of fur-bearing species populations is relatively rare due to their low densities. In addition to catch data, trappers' experience provides information on the ecology and status of the harvested species. Fisher (Pekania pennanti) and American marten (Martes americana) are mustelids that are sensitive to forest management and therefore considered to be ecological indicators of forest health. Fisher populations have increased in eastern North America since the early 2000s and this could have resulted in a northeastern extension of the species' range and increased overlap with marten's range. Moreover, habitats of both species are subject to natural and anthropogenic disturbances. The objective of this study was to document the knowledge held by local trappers in the northern area of sympatry between fisher and marten to identify factors that could explain variation in populations of the two species and interactions between them.
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@ARTICLE { SufficeAsselinImbeauEtAl2017,
TITLE = { More fishers and fewer martens due to cumulative effects of forest management and climate change as evidenced from local knowledge },
AUTHOR = { Suffice, P. and Asselin, H. and Imbeau, L. and Cheveau, M. and Drapeau, P. },
JOURNAL = { Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine },
YEAR = { 2017 },
MONTH = { Sep },
NUMBER = { 1 },
PAGES = { 51 },
VOLUME = { 13 },
ABSTRACT = { Monitoring of fur-bearing species populations is relatively rare due to their low densities. In addition to catch data, trappers' experience provides information on the ecology and status of the harvested species. Fisher (Pekania pennanti) and American marten (Martes americana) are mustelids that are sensitive to forest management and therefore considered to be ecological indicators of forest health. Fisher populations have increased in eastern North America since the early 2000s and this could have resulted in a northeastern extension of the species' range and increased overlap with marten's range. Moreover, habitats of both species are subject to natural and anthropogenic disturbances. The objective of this study was to document the knowledge held by local trappers in the northern area of sympatry between fisher and marten to identify factors that could explain variation in populations of the two species and interactions between them. },
DAY = { 07 },
DOI = { 10.1186/s13002-017-0180-9 },
ISSN = { 1746-4269 },
OWNER = { DanielLesieur },
TIMESTAMP = { 2017.09.08 },
URL = { https://doi.org/10.1186/s13002-017-0180-9 },
}