Title: The status and conservation of mesocarnivores in the Sierra Nevada
Author: Zielinski, William J.
Date: 2004
Source: In: Murphy, Dennis D. and Stine, Peter A., editors. Proceedings of the Sierra Nevada Science Symposium. Gen. Tech. Rep. PSW-GTR-193. Albany, CA: Pacific Southwest Research Station, Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture: 185-193
Station ID: GTR-PSW-193
Description: Carnivores play important roles in structuring communities, and their populations are useful indicators of ecosystem condition (Wennergren and others 1995, Buskirk 1999, Crooks and Soulé 1999, Terborgh and others 2001). As many as 4 of 20 native mammalian carnivore species have been extirpated from the southern Cascade Mountains and Sierra Nevada, with unmeasured effects on ecological communities. Given the loss of a number of significant
carnivores from the system, understanding the status and ecological roles of the remaining species has assumed new urgency. Mesocarnivores (intermediate body-size mammalian carnivores; Buskirk and Zielinski (2003) are of particular importance because of their diversity and variety of ecological roles, and unlike the more conspicuous large carnivores, their populations can decrease with little notice.
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Citation
Zielinski, William J. 2004. The status and conservation of mesocarnivores in the Sierra Nevada. In: Murphy, Dennis D. and Stine, Peter A., editors. Proceedings of the Sierra Nevada Science Symposium. Gen. Tech. Rep. PSW-GTR-193. Albany, CA: Pacific Southwest Research Station, Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture: 185-193.