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A Regional Integrated Assessment of the Impacts of Climate Change and of the Potential Adaptation Avenues for Quebec’s Forests
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A Summary of Beyond Conservation: A Toolkit for Respectful Collaboration with Indigenous Peoples
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A Synthesis of Three Decades of Eco-Hydrological Research at Scotty Creek, NWT, Canada
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Assessing the Influence of Resource Covariates at Multiple Spatial Scales: An Application to Forest Dwelling Caribou Faced with Intensive Human Activity
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Avoidance of Roads and Selection for Recent Cutovers by Threatened Caribou: Fitness-Rewarding or Maladaptive Behaviour?
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Avoidance of Roads by Large Herbivores and its Relation to Disturbance Intensity
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Beyond Conservation: A Toolkit for Respectful Collaboration with Indigenous Peoples
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Calving Rate, Calf Survival Rate, and Habitat Selection of Forest-Dwelling Caribou in a Highly Managed Landscape
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CCLM 2023 Story of the Sector Map
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CCLM Webinar - Advancing Conservation Outcomes Through Research, Collaboration and Knowledge Exchange
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CCLM Webinar - Intensive Forest Management Across Canada: Panel Discussion
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CCLM Webinar - Monitoring Environmental Impacts Through Remote Sensing: Innovations and Advancements
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CCLM Webinar - The Application of Drone and Unoccupied Aerial Vehicle Technology in Conservation Work
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Climate Change Alone Cannot Explain Boreal Caribou Range Recession in Quebec Since 1850
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Climate-informed Forecasts Reveal Dramatic Local Habitat Shifts and Population Uncertainty for Northern Boreal Caribou
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Compensatory Conservation Measures for an Endangered Caribou Population Under Climate Change
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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