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Author Jackson, R.
Title Radio-tracking snow leopards in the Himalaya: a progress report Type Report
Year 1984 Publication Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages (down)
Keywords snow leopard, radio telemetry, Himalaya, Nepal
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Area Expedition Conference
Notes Approved no
Call Number SLN @ rana @ Serial 1261
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Author Clapp, M.
Title Rare cat has back problems Type Newspaper Article
Year Publication San Antonio News Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages (down)
Keywords snow leopard, captivity, medical, San Antonio Zoo, Texas
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Notes Approved no
Call Number SLN @ rana @ Serial 1263
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Author Lindee, S.
Title Snow leopard's back repaired Type Newspaper Article
Year Publication Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages (down)
Keywords snow leopard, captivity, San Antonio Zoo, Texas, medical
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Notes Approved no
Call Number SLN @ rana @ Serial 1264
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Author Woodland Park Zoo
Title No vacancy Type Miscellaneous
Year 1980 Publication Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Winter Pages (down)
Keywords snow leopard, captivity, Woodland Park Zoo, Seattle
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Language English Summary Language Original Title
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Notes Approved no
Call Number SLN @ rana @ Serial 1268
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Author Anonymous
Title You can help save the snow leopard Type Miscellaneous
Year Publication Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages (down)
Keywords Pakistan, snow leopard, conservation
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Language Pakistani Summary Language Original Title
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Notes English translation. Year unknown. Approved no
Call Number SLN @ rana @ Serial 1270
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Author Woodland Park Zoo
Title Snow leopard exhibit plan Type Miscellaneous
Year Publication Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages (down)
Keywords snow leopard, captivity, Woodland Park Zoo, Seattle
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Language English Summary Language Original Title
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Notes Approved no
Call Number SLN @ rana @ Serial 1273
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Author Bagchi, S., Mishra, C., Bhatnagar, Y.V., McCarthy, T.
Title Out of Steppe? Pastoralism and ibex conservation in Spiti. Type Report
Year 2002 Publication CERC Technical Report No. 7 Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages (down)
Keywords steppe, snow leopard, pastoral, conservation, ibex, Spiti, India
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Corporate Author Nature Conservation Foundation, India; Wildlife Institute of India, International Snow Leopard Trust, Seattle Thesis
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Language English Summary Language Original Title
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Notes Approved no
Call Number SLN @ rana @ Serial 1274
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Author Richardson, N.
Title The snow leopard: ghost of the mountains Type Newspaper Article
Year 2010 Publication The telegraph Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue 16 Dec 2010 Pages (down)
Keywords Mongolia, Snow Leopard Trust, Panthera, snow leopard, research
Abstract Snow leopards face the threats of poaching, habitat loss and diminishing prey. In remotest Mongolia, a research team is keeping tabs on this iconic and elusive species.
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Notes http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/wildlife/8207266/The-snow-leopard-ghost-of-the-mountains.html Approved no
Call Number SLN @ rana @ Serial 1292
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Author Gronberg, E.
Title Movement patterns of snow leopard (Panthera uncia) around kills based on GPS location clusters Type Report
Year 2011 Publication Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages (down)
Keywords snow leopard, Panthera, Mongolia, Snow Leopard Trust, predator, prey, kill, behavior
Abstract Research concerning movement patterns of wild animals has been advancing since GPS technology arrived. But studying the snow leopard (Panthera uncia) is still difficult because of the harsh territory it inhabits in Central Asia. This study took place in south Gobi, Mongolia, and aimed to estimate the time spent at kills and the maximum distance away from kills between visits. Snow leopards were monitored with GPS collars that took a location every five or seven hours. Potential kill sites were established by identifying clusters of GPS-locations in ArcGIS and visited in the field for confirmation. ArcGIS was used to calculate the distance between cluster and GPS-locations. I used two buffer zones (100 m and 500 m radius) to define the time snow leopards spent at kills. It was found that snow leopard age and prey category affected time spent at kills and also that snow leopard sex together with prey category affected the maximum distance moved away from kills between visits. Season had no significant effect on either time at kills or distance moved away from kills between visits. Snow leopards spent on average 3.2 days at their kills in the 100 m buffer zone and 3.5 days at their kills in the 500 m buffer zone. Subadults stayed longer at kills than adults and animals of both age categories spent longer time on larger prey. The mean maximum distance moved away from kills between visits was 179 m in the 100 m buffer zone and 252 m in the 500 m buffer zone. Female snow leopards moved further away from kills between visits than male snow leopards. Both the number of days spent on kills and maximum distance moved away from kills between visits increased when kills consisted of more than one animal. This study has provided some basic information on snow leopard behaviors around their kills but also highlights the need to monitor more snow leopards before more solid conclusions can be drawn as this study was based on based on a relatively small sample.
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Corporate Author Thesis Master's thesis
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Notes Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Faculty of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences, Department of Ecology, Grimsö Wildlife Research Station Approved no
Call Number SLN @ rana @ Serial 1301
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Author Alexander, J. S., Gopalswamy, A. M., Shi, K., Riordan, P.
Title Face Value: Towards Robust Estimates of Snow Leopard Densities Type Journal Article
Year 2015 Publication Plos One Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages (down)
Keywords Densities, Snow Leopard, Camera traps, Spatial Capture Recapture models
Abstract When densities of large carnivores fall below certain thresholds, dramatic ecological effects

can follow, leading to oversimplified ecosystems. Understanding the population status of

such species remains a major challenge as they occur in low densities and their ranges are

wide. This paper describes the use of non-invasive data collection techniques combined

with recent spatial capture-recapture methods to estimate the density of snow leopards

Panthera uncia. It also investigates the influence of environmental and human activity indicators

on their spatial distribution. A total of 60 camera traps were systematically set up during

a three-month period over a 480 km2 study area in Qilianshan National Nature Reserve,

Gansu Province, China. We recorded 76 separate snow leopard captures over 2,906 trapdays,

representing an average capture success of 2.62 captures/100 trap-days. We identified

a total number of 20 unique individuals from photographs and estimated snow leopard

density at 3.31 (SE = 1.01) individuals per 100 km2. Results of our simulation exercise indicate

that our estimates from the Spatial Capture Recapture models were not optimal to

respect to bias and precision (RMSEs for density parameters less or equal to 0.87). Our

results underline the critical challenge in achieving sufficient sample sizes of snow leopard

captures and recaptures. Possible performance improvements are discussed, principally by

optimising effective camera capture and photographic data quality.
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Notes Approved no
Call Number SLN @ rakhee @ Serial 1431
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