Amanote Research
Register
Sign In
Figure 3: Body Mass (A), Hair Corticosterone (B), and Fecal Corticosterone Metabolites (C) of White-Footed Mice Captured During the Summer (July–August) in Two Consecutive Years.
doi 10.7717/peerj.8590/fig-3
Full Text
Open PDF
Abstract
Available in
full text
Date
Unknown
Authors
Unknown
Publisher
PeerJ
Related search
Table 6: Factors Predicting Seasonal Variation in Fecal Corticosterone Metabolites of White-Footed Mice Captured During Spring (May–June) and Summer (July–August) 2016.
Figure 6: Correlation Between Hair Corticosterone Levels and Fecal Corticosterone Metabolites for White-Footed Mice (N = 180) Captured in the Thousand Islands National Park, Canada.
Table 4: Factors Predicting Fecal Corticosterone Metabolites of White-Footed Mice During Summer (July–August) in Two Years, for Two Separate Models (Island- Mainland Comparison, and Among-Islands Comparison).
Table 3: Factors Predicting Hair Corticosterone of White-Footed Mice During Summer (July-August) in Two Years, for Two Separate Models (Island- Mainland Comparison, and Among-Islands Comparison).
Table 5: Factors Predicting Seasonal Variation in Hair Corticosterone of White-Footed Mice Captured in Spring (May-June) and Summer (July–August) 2016.
Table 2: Factors Predicting Body Mass of White-Footed Mice During Summer (July-August) in Two Years, for Two Separate Models (Island-Mainland Comparison, and Among-Islands Comparison).
Figure 4: Hair Corticosterone (CORThair; Measured in Ng/G and Ln-Transformed) Levels Increased With Body Mass in White Food Mice Captured Over Two Years in the Thousand Islands National Park, Canada.
Figure S1: Serial Dilutions of Pooled Hair and Fecal Extract Showed Parallel Displacement With the Corticosterone Standard Curve (Hair R = 0.996, P < 0.01; Fecal R = 0.996, P < 0.01)
Table 1: Factors Predicting Relative Abundance of White-Footed Mice Captured Over Two Years, for Two Separate Models (Island- Mainland Comparison, and Among-Islands Comparison).