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Benefits of Fertilization for White Spruce and Lodgepole Pine Trees Depend on the Reclamation Substrate – Overburden vs Tailings Sand
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Boreal Trees Can Grow on Saline Sites – Implications for Reclamation Success on Saline Soils
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Caribou in Northern British Columbia: An Assessment of Range Condition and Population Status
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Coarse Woody Debris Increases Microbial Functional Diversity in Reclaimed Soils
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Conservation Status of Caribou in the Western Mountains of Canada: Protections under the Species At Risk Act, 2002-2014
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Conservation Status of Caribou in the Western Mountains of Canada: Protections under the Species At Risk Act, 2002-2014
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Based on declines, future developments and current recovery effects, we offer the following recommendations: 1) where recovery actions are necessary, commit to simultaneously reducing human intrusion into caribou ranges, re-storing habitat over the long term, and conducting short-term predator control, 2) carefully consider COSEWIC’s new DU structure for management and recovery actions, especially regarding translocations, 3) carry out regular surveys to monitor the condition of Northern Mountain caribou subpopulations and immediately implement preventative measures where necessary, and 4) undertake a proactive, planned approach coordinated across jurisdictions to conserve landscape processes important to caribou conservation
Continental Synchrony and Local Responses: Climatic Effects on Spatiotemporal Patterns of Calving in a Social Ungulate
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Deeper Soil Salvaging Depths Produce Greater Cover of Native Plants than Shallow Salvage Depths on a Reclaimed Coal Mine Site
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Efficacy and Ethics of Intensive Predator Management to Save Endangered Caribou
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Factors Contributing to the Cultural and Spatial Variability of Landscape Burning by Native Peoples of Interior Alaska
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Factors Contributing to the Cultural and Spatial Variability of Landscape Burning by Native Peoples of Interior Alaska
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Integrating Coastal Vulnerability and Community-Based Subsistence Resource Mapping in Northwest Alaska
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Integrating Coastal Vulnerability and Community-Based Subsistence Resource Mapping in Northwest Alaska
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Microtopography Matters: Belowground CH4 Cycling Regulated by Differing Microbial Processes in Peatland Hummocks and Lawns
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Plow-in Pipeline Construction Improves Recovery of Rough Fescue Grassland
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Prioritization can Improve Cost Effectiveness of Seismic Line Restoration
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Protecting Forest Floor in Place Rather than Stripping it Off is a Better Strategy to Regenerated Temporary Drilling Pads
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Rat Root Plants May Not be Suitable for Reclaiming Oil Sands Tailing Ponds
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Reconstructed Soils in Alberta Oil Sands Limit Fine Root Growth of Trees
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