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Joseph D. Holbrook

Researcher at University of Wyoming

Publications -  39
Citations -  518

Joseph D. Holbrook is an academic researcher from University of Wyoming. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Habitat. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 29 publications receiving 349 citations. Previous affiliations of Joseph D. Holbrook include United States Department of Agriculture & Texas A&M University.

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Functional responses in habitat selection: clarifying hypotheses and interpretations.

TL;DR: Assessment of the conceptual and statistical foundations of methods currently used to model functional responses and the ecological tests evaluated within each approach helps clarify the similarities and differences among current approaches and, therefore, assists the integration of functional responses into the mainstream of habitat ecology and management.
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A multi‐method approach for analyzing hierarchical genetic structures: a case study with cougars Puma concolor

TL;DR: In this paper, an analytical framework based on individual ancestry values was proposed to test for local barriers to gene flow and evaluate eff ects of landscape gradients through individual-based genetic distances that account for hierarchical genetic structure.
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A Pedagogical Model for Team-Based, Problem-Focused Interdisciplinary Doctoral Education

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a model for educating doctoral students for careers involving interdisciplinary, team-based research to address problem-focused questions, which is theoretically based and evaluated in light of the literature, faculty perspectives, and an assessment by students of educational successes and challenges they experienced.
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Understanding and predicting habitat for wildlife conservation: the case of Canada lynx at the range periphery

TL;DR: Developing multi-scale predictions of lynx distribution and learning that across scales and seasons, lynx use more mature, spruce-fir forests than any other structure stage or species advance habitat conservation efforts and are of broad utility to applied ecologists and managers.
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Wolverines in winter: Indirect habitat loss and functional responses to backcountry recreation

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of back-country recreation on wolverine habitat relationships was investigated using Global Positioning System (GPS) collars to 24 individual wolverines and acquired >54,000 GPS locations over 39 animal-years during winter.