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Wolves
Wolf History, Conservation, Ecology and Behavior
[www.wolfology.com]
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Abridged version available in RESOURCES
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Article available in WOLF WARS
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Abstract available in ABSTRACTS
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Wolves Bibliography-W
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Walker, T. Crimson Tundra. Alaska, May 1991, 26-7.
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Walters, C.J. et al. Simulation and Optimization Models for a Wolf-Ungulate System. In (Fowler, C.W. & T.D. Smith, eds.) Dynamics of Large Mammal Populations (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1981), 317-337.
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Walton, L.R. et al. Movement Patterns of Barren-Ground Wolves in the Central Canadian Arctic. Journal of Mammalogy, 82/3, 2001, 867-876.
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Walton, L.R. et al. Performance of 2 Models of Satellite Collars for Wolves. Wildlife Society Bulletin, 29/1, Spring 2001, 180.
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Wayne, R.K. et al. Conservation Genetics of the Endangered Isle Royale Gray Wolf. Conservation Biology, 5/1, 1991, 41-51.
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Wayne, R.K. et al. Conservation Genetics of the Gray Wolf. In (Carbyn, L.N. et al, eds.) Ecology and Conservation of Wolves in a Changing World: Proceedings of the Second North American Symposium on Wolves, Canadian Circumpolar Institute, 1995, 399-498.
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Wayne, R.K. & S.M. Jenks. Mitochondrial DNA Analysis Implying Extensive Hybridization of the Endangered Red Wolf (Canis rufus). Nature, 351/6327, 13 June 1991, 565 (4pp).
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Wayne, R.K. et al. Mitochondrial DNA Variability of the Gray Wolf: Genetic Consequences of Population Decline and Habitat Fragmentation. Conservation Biology, 6/4, 1992, 559-569.
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Wayne, R.K. et al. Origin of the Red Wolf: Response to Nowak and Federoff and Gardner. Conservation Biology, 12, 1998, 726-729.
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Wayne, R.K. & J.L. Gittleman. The Problematic Red Wolf. Scientific American, 273/1, 1995, 36-39.
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Weaver, J. Of Wolves and Grizzly Bears. Western Wildlands 12/3, Spring 1986, 27-29.
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Weaver, J. Of Wolves and Livestock. Western Wildlands, 8/4, Winter 1983, 37-39.
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Weaver, J. The Wolves of Yellowstone. Natural Resources Report No. 14, US Dept. of the Interior, 1979.
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Weaver, J.L. & S. H. Fritts. Comparison of Coyote and Wolf Scat Diameters. Journal of Wildlife Management, 43, 1979, 786-788.
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Weaver, J. L. 1994. Ecology of Wolf Predation Amidst High Ungulate Diversity in Jasper National Park, Alberta. PhD thesis. University of Montana, 1994 (166pp).
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Weaver, J.L. Refining the Equation for Interpreting Prey Occurrence in Gray Wolf Scats. Journal of Wildlife Management, 57/3, July 1993, 534.
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Weaver, J.L. et al. Resilience and Conservation of Large Carnivores in the Rocky Mountains. Conservation Biology, 10/4, August 1994, 964-976.
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Webakken, P. et al. The Recovery, Distribution, and Population Dynamics of Wolves on the Scandinavian Peninsula, 1978-1998. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 79, April 2000, 710-725.
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Weier, A. Isle is Perfect Laboratory for Moose and Wolves. (Madison, WI) Capital Times, 31 May 2003, 1B.
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Weisiger, M.L. The Debate over El Lobo: Can Historians Make a Difference? The Public Historian, 26/1, Winter 2004, 123-144.
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Wheat, S. Crying Wolf. The Guardian (London), 14 March 2001.
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Wheler, C.L. & A.M. Pocknell. Ectopic Perianal Gland Tumor in a Timber Wolf. Canadian Veterinary Journal - Revue Veterinaire Canadienne, 37/1, January 1996, 41-42.
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Whipple, D. Predatory Politics. UPI Science News, 11 April 2003.
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Whipple, D. Welcoming Back the Wolves. UPI Science News, 4 April 2003.
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White, D. Man-sized Wolf. Field & Stream, 48/9, January 1944, 75.
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Whitby, J.E. et al. Rabies Virus in the Decomposed Brain of an Ethiopian Wolf Detected by Nested Reverse Transcription-Polmerase Chain Reaction. Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 33/4, 1997, 912-915.
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Whitfield, J. Alaska Diary Part 4: Wolf. Nature Science Update, 23 August 2003.
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Whitlock, S.C. Identification of Wolf, Coyote, Dog. Michigan Conservation, October 1980, 39-50.
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Whittaker, M.W. Strange Adventures With a Wolf. Rod and Gun in Canada, 12/11, April 1911, 1425-1427.
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Whitteker, R. Interactive and Innovative Programs Using Captive Wolves as the Educational Cornerstone. World Wolf Congress 2003.
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Whittington, J. et al. Path Tortuosity and the Permeability of Roads and Trails to Wolf Movement. Ecology and Society, 9/1, 2004, 4.
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Wilkin, D. The Mystery of Wolves. The (Montreal) Gazette, 3 February 2001.
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Wilkinson, T. Call of the Wild Echoes in West as Wolf Recovery Succeeds. Christian Science Monitor, 95, 1 May 2003, 2.
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Wilkinson, T. Wolf Wanderlust. Wildlife Conservation, 105/3, May-June 2002, 12.
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Wilkinson, T. Yellowstone's Changing of the Guard: Wolves Are Taking Over from the Coyote as the Dominant Canine in the World's Most Famous National Park. Defenders, 72/4, Fall 1997, 6-11.
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Williams, C.K. et al. A Quantitative Summary of Attitudes Toward Wolves and Their Reintroduction, 1972-2000. Wildlife Society Bulletin, 30/2, Summer 2002, 575.
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Williams, R.D. Hunting the Gray Wolf. Recreation, 29/1, January 1909, 3-7.
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Williams, T. Alaska's War on Wolves. Audubon, May-June 1993.
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Williams, T. Living with Wolves. Audubon, 102/6, Nov./Dec. 2000, 50 (8pp).
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Wilmers, C. & D. Stahler. Constraints on Active-Consumption Rates in Gray Wolves, Coyotes, and Grizzly Bears. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 80, July 2002, 1255-1261.
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Wilmers, C.C. et al. Resource Dispersion and Consumer Dominance: Scavenging at Wolf- and Hunter-Killed Carcasses in Greater Yellowstone, USA. Ecology Letters, 6/11, November 2003, 996-1003.
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Wilmers, C.C. Simulating the Effects of Wolf-Elk Population Dynamics on Resource Flow to Scavengers. Ecological Modelling, 177/1-2, September 2004, 193 (16pp).
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Wilmers, C.C. et al. Trophic Facilitation by Introduced Top Predators: Grey Wolf Subsidies to Scavengers in Yellowstone National Park. Journal of Animal Ecology, 72/6, November 2003, 909-916.
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Wilson, C. The Wolves Are Always After Us. Forest and Outdoors, 33/2, 1937, 37-38, 62.
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Wilson, D.J. & G.J. Soulliere. Simulated Howling Confirms Resident Wolves on Northern Michigan Islands. Michigan DNR, Wildlife Division Report, December 1994.
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Wilson, M.A. & T.A. Heberlein. The Wolf, the Tourist, and the Recreational Context: New Opportunity or Uncommon Circumstance? Human Dimensions of Wildlife, 1/4, 1996, 38-53.
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Wilson, P.J. et al. DNA Profiles of the Eastern Canadian Wolf and the Red Wolf Provide Evidence for a Common Evolutionary History Independent of the Gray Wolf. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 78, December 2000, 2156-2166.
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Wilson, P., et al. Mitochondrial DNA Extracted from Eastern North American Wolves Killed in the 1800s is not of Gray Wolf Origin. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 81, May 2003, 936-940.
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Wilson, P.I. Wolves, Politics, and the Nez Perce: Wolf Recovery in Central Idaho and the Role of Native Tribes. Natural Resources Journal, 39/3, Summer 1999, 543 (22pp).
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Wilson, P.J. et al. A Molecular-Genetic Estimate of the Extent of Wolf-Coyote Hybridization in the Wolf Population of Algonquin Park, Ontario. In (Fascione, N. & M. Cecil, comps.) Wolves of America Conference Proceedings, November 1996, 204-207.
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Wineman, E. White Wolf, Foe of Cattlemen, is Dead. Montana Wild Life, 2/12, 1930, 6-7.
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Winkleman, C. A Pack of Controversy. Milwaukee (WI) Journal Sentinel, 17 September 2002, 03B.
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Withgott, J. Signs of Stress Seen in Snowmobile Season. Science, 296, 7 June 2002, 1784 (2pp).
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Wolf, C. Sustainability, Environmental Policy, and the Reintroduction of Wolves. In (Sharpe, V.A. et al., eds.) Wolves and Human Communities: Biology, Politics, and Ethics, 2001, 233-253.
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Wolfe, M.L. & D.L. Allen. Continued Studies of the Status, Socializations, and Relationships of Isle Royale Wolves, 1967 to 1970. Journal of Mammalogy, 54, 1973, 611-633.
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Wolff, J.F. Man-Killing Wolves: Fact or Fiction? Minnesota Volunteer, 40/235, 1977, 44-51.
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Woodhouse, S.W. The North American Jackal--Canis frustror. Journal of the Academy of Natural Science, Philadelphia (2d series), 2, 1852, 87-88.
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Wright, G.J. An Analysis of the Northern Yellowstone Elk Herd: Population Reconstruction and Selection of Elk by Wolves and Hunters. M.S. thesis, Michigan Technological University, 2003 (124pp).
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Wuerthner, G. Potential for Wolf Recovery in Oregon. In (Fascione, N. & M. Cecil, comps.) Wolves of America Conference Proceedings, November 1996, 285-291.
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Wydeven, A.P. Extirpation and Recolonization of Gray Wolves in Wisconsin. In Wolves of America Conference Proceedings, 14-16 November 1996, Albany, NY, Defenders of Wildlife, 111-122.
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Wydeven, A.P. et. al. Growth, Survival, and Productivity of a Colonizing Wolf Population in Wisconsin. World Wolf Congress 2003.
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Wydeven, A. P. et al. Monitoring of a Recovering Wolf Population in Wisconsin, 1979 – 1991. In (Carbyn, L.N. et al, eds.) Ecology and Conservation of Wolves in a Changing World. Canadian Circumpolar Institute, 1995, 147-156.
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Wydeven, A.P. et al. The Potential for Wolf Recovery in the Northeastern United States Via Dispersal from Southeastern Canada. Wildlife Society Bulletin, 26/4, Winter 1998, 776 (9pp).
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