Displays news articles from the Wildlife Disease News Digest. The Map displays articles that have been posted within the last 45 days that have a geographical reference.
This new discussion document highlights the overwhelming evidence for major changes to national food and farming policy. It’s been written by a collaboration of 10 UK organisations: the RSPB, Friends of the Earth, the National Trust, the Food Ethics Council, Sustain, the Wildlife Trusts, the Soil Association, Eating Better and Compassion in World Farming working with the Food Research Collaboration.
Amazing Buddha Tours offer an array of premium holiday as well as motorbike tour packages for North East India, Nepal, and Bhutan, catering to countless tourists with diverse tastes and inclination.
The online version of Models for Planning Wildlife Conservation in Large Landscapes by Joshua J. Millspaugh and Frank R. Thompson III on ScienceDirect.com, the world's leading platform for high quality peer-reviewed full-text books.
Providing the scientific basis for effective conservation, NatureServe and its network of natural heritage programs are the trusted source for information about rare and endangered species and threatened ecosystems
[free after 18 months, from 1965] The Journal of Wildlife Diseases publishes the results of original research and observations dealing with all aspects of infectious, parasitic, toxic, nutritional, physiologic, developmental and neoplastic diseases, environmental contamination, and other factors impinging on the health and survival of free-living or captive populations of wild animals, including fish. Papers on zoonoses involving wildlife and on chemical immobilization of wild animals are published also. Manuscripts dealing with surveys and case reports may be published in the Journal provided that they contain significant new information or have significance for better understanding health and disease in wild populations. Authors are encouraged to address the wildlife management implications of their studies, where appropriate.