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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.

Jon

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Hawaii Advice

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  1. Morten Kure Kattenhøj on Bat Trip to Daugbjerg Kalkgruber, Denmark18 February 2026
  2. Speaker_for_the_lost on Bats at Pinery Provincial Park18 February 2026
  3. Speaker_for_the_lost on Bats at Pinery Provincial Park18 February 2026

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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. Morten Kure Kattenhøj on Bat Trip to Daugbjerg Kalkgruber, Denmark18 February 2026

    You’re welcome, Chad.

  2. Speaker_for_the_lost on Bats at Pinery Provincial Park18 February 2026

    Should add that Seoraksan National Park is semi-reliable for Long-Tailed Goral (there is a population there but they're not always…

  3. Speaker_for_the_lost on Bats at Pinery Provincial Park18 February 2026

    There are some fairly well-known birding sites in Korea (including wintering sites for 90% of the global Baikal Teal population,…

  4. Chad Johnson on Bat Trip to Daugbjerg Kalkgruber, Denmark18 February 2026

    This is great stuff, thanks!

Community

18 February 2026
Bats at Pinery Provincial Park
18 February 2026
Bat Trip to Daugbjerg Kalkgruber, Denmark
16 February 2026
Hawaii Advice
16 February 2026
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