The point here is not so much the terminology but what the terminology falsely implies: a rigid, force-based dominance hierarchy | Wolf interactions with non-prey in L |
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Montepulciano Siena : Le balze | Chicago: University of Chicago Press |
Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research, Volume 45 Issue 2 Page 163-172, May 2007 []• Wolves: Behaviour, Ecology and Conservation.
Proceedings of the scientific conference [Issues of applied ecology, game management and fur farming], 27—28 May 1997, Kirov p-143-146• The Spotted Hyena: A study of predation and social behaviour | The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois |
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White: Genetic nature of eastern wolves: Past, present and future | IUCN SSC Wolf Specialist Group 2008 |
Edited by Patrick Valkenburg and Mark McNay• Valerius Geist, Professor Emeritus of Environmental Science, The University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada | 1997 Sex and age structure of people attacked by wolves in different seasons |
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Il Lupo in Provincia di Arezzo | Relative risks of predation on livestock posed by individual wolves, black bears, mountain lions and coyotes in Idaho Mark Collinge, United States Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Wildlife Services, Boise, Idaho• London: British Museum Natural History |
Words from the Land: Encounters with Natural History Writing by Stephen Trimble, published by University of Nevada Press, 1995,• The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois.
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