CLICK THE FOLLOWING "NUMBERED LINK TO READ A PROTECTED AREA INFLUENCES GENOTYPESPECIFIC SURVIVAL AND THE STRUCTURE OF A CANIS HYBRID ZONE
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Monday, May 5, 2014
Trent University, The Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Utah State University biologists John Benson, Brent Patterson and Peter Mahoney have penned a very informative peer reviewed article entitled A PROTECTED AREA INFLUENCES GENOTYPE-SPECIFIC SURVIVAL AND THE STRUCTURE OF A CANIS HYBRID ZONE that focuses on the success and failure that the Eastern Wolf of Algonquin Provincial Park in Ontario, Canada is having inside the Park boundaries(success) and outside the Park boundaries(failure)...............The bottom line is that as the historical dominant canid inside the Park over the past 100 years+, that despite Gray Wolves and Eastern Coyotes both abutting Park boundaries as well as periodically inhabiting the Park, the Eastern Wolves based on historical abundance, enough of their own kind to mate with and territorial dominance reproduce successfully(.85 annual survival) and are the dominant canid there...................However, once outside the Park and the immediate no hunting buffer zone, the Eastern Wolves mortality is at least 50% annually due to hunters and trappers, naivety of where to create home territories and ability to cross roads successfully............A lack of available Eastern Wolves in this "hostile zone" increases hybridization probability with Eastern Coyotes....................Bottom line is that large core reserves like Algonquin Park are critical to Eastern Wolf survival........However, Eastern Wolf population expansion can only occur if extended protected corridors to other large protected core reserves in northern Canada and the Northeastern USA are created
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