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Mitropolskiy O.V. (1979). The Red Book of the USSR (Rare and endangered bird and animal species in Uzbekistan).
Abstract: Snow leopard is distributed in the Ugam, Pskem, Chatkal, Fergana, Alai, Turkistan, and Hissar ridges. Though there is no precise data concerning number of snow leopard in Uzbekistan it is estimated to range from 15-20 to 50 animals.
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The Current Digest of the Soviet Press. (1979). Soviet Zoos: Limited in Imagination, Space and Numbers. The Current Digest of the Soviet Press, XXXL(23), 5.
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Freeman, H. (1979). Phantom cat. Puget Soundings, , 8–13.
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Aspinall, J. (1979). New enclosures at Howletts and Port Lympne (Vol. 2).
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Houston Zoological Society. (1979). Houston's summer snow.
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Clevenger, S., S. (1979). Breeding snow leopards in the north 40.
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Schaller, G. B. (1979). Between two worlds. Animal Kingdom, 82(2), 4–21.
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Fore, D. (1979). The snow leopard factory. San Antonio's News from the Zoo, 5(6), 1–2.
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Zhiryakov V.A. (1979). The influence of large predators on wild mammal populations in the Almaty nature reserve.
Abstract: There are following large predators in the Almaty nature reserve: wolf (5-6), snow leopard (single occasions), Turkistan lynx (single occasions), and Tien Shan brown bear (15-20). The share of wild mammals (roe-deer, ibex, wild boar, argali, gazelle, moral, and badger) being eaten by predators is 18.2 percent, about 60 percent of the entire prey falling to the share of wolf.
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Vyrypaev V.A. (1979). Ecologic prerequisites for predatory mammal conservation in the mountain biocenosis of the Issyk-Kul area.
Abstract: A decreasing number of predatory mammal species is connected with anthropogenic activity. Number of snow leopard is directly dependent on anthropogenic activity. A snow leopard population directly depends on food resources, such as ibex, marmot, rarer – argali and snow-cock in summer, and ibex, roe-deer, and rarer argali in winter.
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