49,468 research outputs found
Wolf, I.J. -- 1967 -- Correspondence, Individual -- letter, 1967-09-15
Letter from Wolf, I. J. to Sabin, Albert B. dated 1967-09-15.Sabin Collection Fair Use Policy</a
Wolf, I.J. -- 1967 -- Correspondence, Individual -- letter, 1967-09-19
Letter from Sabin, Albert B. to Wolf, I. J. dated 1967-09-19.Sabin Collection Fair Use Policy</a
Monitoring wolf populations using howling points combined with sign survey transects
Wolves respond to simulated howling, especially during the mating and breeding seasons. Simulated howling points are, therefore, commonly used by many wolf researchers around the world to estimate pack numbers in a given area. A large amount of information is available on various pack breeding
areas in Asturias, the only region in north-western Spain where the Iberian wolf (Canis lupus signatus, Cabrera 1907) is not classed as a game species. Wolf research began there in the early 1980s. We present the results of the latest study on population status, conducted between July and November, 2001. Using sampling transects to detect wolf scat and scratch marks and designated howling and observation points, twenty one (21) wolf packs were
definitely located, with two others considered “likely”. Nineteen (19) packs were detected using howling points (n=314). The results of this study show that simulated howling points and sampling transects are reliable and
inexpensive way of detecting wolf packs
Franz Wolf family collection 1820-1936
Materials pertaining to the Wolf family from Ockenheim in Rhenish Hesse, GermanyAccount ledger of Benjamin Wolf (9/25/1780 – 2/11/1859) from Ockenheim, Germany [R 60]Rosenthal, B.: [Family tree of the Wolf family from Ockenheim], manuscript (copy), Mannheim; 1936The ledger contains entries from 1820 to 1853, attesting to Wolf’s purchasing houses for himself and two of his sons and providing dowries for two of his daughters.digitize
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