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Mammal Watching

HomeNorth AmericanWolves May Aid Recovery of Canada Lynx
31 August 2011
North American

Wolves May Aid Recovery of Canada Lynx

ScienceDaily (Aug. 30, 2011) — As wolf populations grow in parts of the West, most of the focus has been on their value in aiding broader ecosystem recovery — but a new study from Oregon State University also points out that they could play an important role in helping to save other threatened species.

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About Jon Hall

Genetically Welsh, spiritually Australian, currently in New York City. I’ve also lived and worked in London, Canberra, Paris and Lusaka, and visited almost 120 countries.

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Latest comments

  1. Ralf Bürglin on Sun bear vs. „urinal men“ – or: Is it safe to camp in Thailand’s Kaeng Krachan jungle?22 June 2026

    I have found a study here regarding the danger posed by sun bears: Sethy and Chauhan, 2013: Human-sun bears conflict…

  2. jonaslivet on Leopard Seals in Tierra del Fuego November or December 2026.22 June 2026

    Hello, I am actually exploring the options to observe Leopard Seal there, and planning such a trip for 2026/2027 myself.…

  3. Jon Hall on Palau (May 2026)21 June 2026

    Congrats Murray! This may be the first time anyone has had a 100% clean up for a country's mammals on…

  4. Jon Hall on Contacts to local guides around Chapada Diamantina, Brazil?20 June 2026

    Sorry. We used her too. If she can t offer any more names I can’t think who could.

Community

22 June 2026
Update from 1Stop Borneo about Marc Bozon’s Big Cat Year adventures: Borneo mega trip!
21 June 2026
Wild Vietnam: Rare Primates & Mammals 2-Week Expedition — NEXT CONTINENT 2026 Trip Report
21 June 2026
Advertising: Namibia Mammal Safari with Nature Travel Africa, departing 9 May 2027
21 June 2026
Palau (May 2026)

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