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Author | Gao, Y.T. | ||||
Title | Fauna Sinica: Mammalia | Type | Miscellaneous | ||
Year | 1987 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | 8 | Issue | Pages | ||
Keywords | 5390 | ||||
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Publisher | Science Press | Place of Publication | Beijing | Editor | |
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Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | SLN @ rana @ 523 | Serial | 332 | ||
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Author | Yakhontov A.A. | ||||
Title | Fauna of mountains | Type | Miscellaneous | ||
Year | 1950 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 60-61 | ||
Keywords | Uzbekistan; mountains; fauna; mammals; snow leopard.; 8570; Russian | ||||
Abstract | Ibex, whose population has reduced due to over-hunting, inhabits the alpine meadow zone in Uzbekistan. Ibex had entirely disappeared in some areas. Wild sheep, a common inhabitant of the alpine zone, has drastically decreased in number. Marhur can still be found in the mountains of Kugitang and Babatang. Wild sheep is a common species for the alpine zone. Predator animals such as snow leopard, bear, and sometimes wolf and fox can be found in this zone. A typical inhabitant of highlands is marmot an object of fur-trade. | ||||
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Notes | Full text available in RussianJournal Title: Uzbekistan. Economic and geographic characteristics. | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | SLN @ rana @ 834 | Serial | 1043 | ||
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Author | Formozov A.N. | ||||
Title | Fauna of mountainous areas in Kazakhstan | Type | Miscellaneous | ||
Year | 1987 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 115-126 | ||
Keywords | Kazakhstan; mountains; fauna; snow leopard.; 6720; Russian | ||||
Abstract | The author provides description of fauna of Kazakhstan's mountainous areas. Fauna of the mountain taiga is also typical for the forests of South Siberia. Ungulate species such as musk deer and ibex are common for rocky taiga areas. In the Altai, ibex, musk deer, and wild sheep are preyed on by dhole and snow leopard and more typical species such as glutton and wolf. Ibex, argali, and irbis are typical for Transili Ala-Tau and West Tien Shan. Tien Shan is the only area of the USSR with quite many irbis preserved. The ridges of this mountainous area located in Kazakhstan are very likely to be an area the most densely populated by snow leopards within the predator's habitat. | ||||
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Notes | Full text available in RussianJournal Title: Fauna of Kazakhstan. | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | SLN @ rana @ 650 | Serial | 284 | ||
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Author | Bekenov A.B. | ||||
Title | Fauna of mammals in the State National Nature Park “Altyn-Emel” | Type | Miscellaneous | ||
Year | 2002 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 83-87 | ||
Keywords | Kazakhstan; Altyn-Emel national park; mammals; endangered mammals; snow leopard.; 6230; Russian | ||||
Abstract | Over 80 mammal species, nine of which are included in the Red Data Book (stone marten, marbled polecat, otter, manul, snow leopard, dziggetai, argali, bear), inhabit the State National Nature Park “Altyn-Emel”. | ||||
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Notes | Full text available in RussianJournal Title: Zoological studies in Kazakhstan. | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | SLN @ rana @ 601 | Serial | 128 | ||
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Author | Alibekov L.A. | ||||
Title | Fauna | Type | Miscellaneous | ||
Year | 1978 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 192-195 | ||
Keywords | Uzbekistan; Jizak region; fauna; landscape; biotic factors; fishes; reptiles; birds; insects; mammals; snow leopard.; 5970; Russian | ||||
Abstract | Represented is fauna of big salt-marsh valleys and pre-Kyzylkum area, a tier of low desert foothill valleys, tiers of lowland ridges, deeply cut hillside midlands, and cold highlands of the watershed ridge-top tier in the Jizak region of Uzbekistan. The highest tier of the Jizak region, a habitat of snow leopard, Menzbier's marmot, Siberian ibex, sometimes wild Tajik sheep coming from the East, bear ascending from lower elevations, and wolf in summer, has the most adverse living conditions. Central Asia argali and stone marten inhabit in central part of the North Nurata ridge. | ||||
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Notes | Full text available in RussianJournal Title: Natural conditions and resources of the Jizak region. | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | SLN @ rana @ 576 | Serial | 60 | ||
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Author | Artykbaev P.K. | ||||
Title | Fauna | Type | Miscellaneous | ||
Year | 1981 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 51 | ||
Keywords | Uzbekistan; fauna; game species; mammals; birds; reptiles; desert; geographical zones; mountain semi desert; mountain steppe; alpine zone; rare species; snow leopard.; 6100; Russian | ||||
Abstract | Uzbekistan's fauna includes 97 mammal species (insectivorous six species, Cheiroptera 20, hare type species 2, rodents 37, ungulates 8); 379 bird species, of which 184 are passerine; 58 reptile species; 69 fish species. Species inhabiting sand deserts, clay deserts, and mountains are listed. The following mammal species inhabit the alpine zone: bear, snow leopard, ermine, weasel, wolf, Siberian mountain ibex, wild sheep, Menzbier's marmot and long-tailed marmot, voles, red pica. The following game species are listed in the Red Book: bear, leopard, lynx, snow leopard, cheetah, caracal, otter, marbled polecat, goitered gazelle, Bukhara deer, marchor, and wild sheep (there are two wild sheep sub-species in the country Bukhara and Kizilkum wild sheep). | ||||
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Notes | Full text available in RussianJournal Title: Uzbek SSR. Encyclopedia. | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | SLN @ rana @ 589 | Serial | 103 | ||
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Author | Berg L.S. | ||||
Title | Fauna | Type | Miscellaneous | ||
Year | 1938 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 161-164 | ||
Keywords | Central Asia; mountains; fauna; snow leopard.; 6270; Russian | ||||
Abstract | It provides description of fauna of the Central Asia mountains. Ibex (Capra sibirica) was noticed to keep to the alpine and sub-alpine zone and never descends bellow 2,500 m. Hunting for ibex and wild sheep, snow leopard (Leopardus uncia) keeps at the same elevation. | ||||
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Notes | Full text available in RussianJournal Title: Nature of the USSR. | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | SLN @ rana @ 605 | Serial | 133 | ||
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Author | Epifanov V.M. | ||||
Title | Fauna | Type | Miscellaneous | ||
Year | 1968 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 29-33 | ||
Keywords | Uzbekistan; Western Tien Shan; Chatkal nature reserve; fishes; amphibians; reptiles; birds; mammals; snow leopard.; 6540; Russian | ||||
Abstract | There are three fish species, two amphibian species, nine reptile, 97 bird species, and 23 mammal species, including snow leopard, in the Chatkal reserve. A list of animals and their brief description is provided. | ||||
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Notes | Full text available in RussianJournal Title: The land of pristine environment (Guidebook for the Chatkal nature reserve). | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | SLN @ rana @ 632 | Serial | 254 | ||
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Author | Durbach, I., Borchers, D., Sutherland, C., Sharma, K. | ||||
Title | Fast, flexible alternatives to regular grid designs for spatial capture–recapture. | Type | Research Article | ||
Year | 2020 | Publication | Methods in Ecology and Evolution | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | Issue | Pages | 1-13 | ||
Keywords | camera trap, population ecology,sampling, spatial capture-recapture, surveys | ||||
Abstract | Spatial capture–recapture (SCR) methods use the location of detectors (camera traps, hair snares and live-capture traps) and the locations at which animals were detected (their spatial capture histories) to estimate animal density. Despite the often large expense and effort involved in placing detectors in a landscape, there has been relatively little work on how detectors should be located. A natural criterion is to place traps so as to maximize the precision of density estimators, but the lack of a closed-form expression for precision has made optimizing this criterion computationally demanding. 2. Recent results by Efford and Boulanger (2019) show that precision can be well approximated by a function of the expected number of detected individuals and expected number of recapture events, both of which can be evaluated at low computational cost. We use these results to develop a method for obtaining survey designs that optimize this approximate precision for SCR studies using count or binary proximity detectors, or multi-catch traps. 3. We show how the basic design protocol can be extended to incorporate spatially varying distributions of activity centres and animal detectability. We illustrate our approach by simulating from a camera trap study of snow leopards in Mongolia and comparing estimates from our designs to those generated by regular or optimized grid designs. Optimizing detector placement increased the number of detected individuals and recaptures, but this did not always lead to more precise density estimators due to less precise estimation of the effective sampling area. In most cases, the precision of density estimators was comparable to that obtained with grid designs, with improvement in some scenarios where approximate CV(¬D) < 20% and density varied spatially. 4. Designs generated using our approach are transparent and statistically grounded. They can be produced for survey regions of any shape, adapt to known information about animal density and detectability, and are potentially easier and less costly to implement. We recommend their use as good, flexible candidate designs for SCR surveys when reasonable knowledge of model parameters exists. We provide software for researchers to construct their own designs, in the form of updates to design functions in the r package oSCR. |
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Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | Serial | 1618 | |||
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Author | Han, X. Miquelle, D. G., Zhang, E., Jones, M., and Jin, T.. | ||||
Title | Far eastern leopard and Siberian tiger conservation measures. | Type | Conference Article | ||
Year | 2001 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 102-103 | ||
Keywords | CCT, conservation, conservation needs, conservation strategy, distribution, Jilin Province, leopard, monitoring, Panthera pardus, Panthera tigris, poaching, recovery, Recovery plan, snow | ||||
Abstract | Workshop to develop a recovery plan for the wild north China tiger population. October 20th to 23th, 2000, Harbin. Like the Siberian Tiger, the Far Eastern Leopard is one of China's largest Felidae and lives mainly in the eastern mountains of Jilin Province. The number of leopards is very low and it is even more endangered than the tiger. There is a very close relationship between leopard and tiger conservation, especially in areas where overlap occurs. In these areas, special emphasis has to be placed on each of the species' specific conservation needs. There is urgent need to step up our efforts to study and monitor leopard populations and to develop a conservation strategy. This document contains information of the status and main threats of the Far Eastern leopard and makes recommendations on needed conservation measures. |
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Corporate Author | U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Rhinoceros and Tiger Conservation Fund | Thesis | |||
Publisher | Widlife Conservation Society | Place of Publication | Harbin | Editor | |
Language | English | Summary Language | Original Title | ||
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Notes | Approved | no | |||
Call Number | SLN @ rana @ | Serial | 1117 | ||
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