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Figure 1: A Red Fox Carries Away a Large Portion of Mule Deer Carcass, a Summer Prey Killed by an Adult Female Mountain Lion in the Southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.
doi 10.7717/peerj.5324/fig-1
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PeerJ
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Table 1: The Top 10 Models Predicting Where Red Foxes Scavenged at Mountain Lion Kill Sites, Estimated With Generalized Linear Mixed Models, During Winter and Summer in the Southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem From 2012–2015.
Figure 3: A Red Fox Awaiting the Departure of a Mountain Lion So It Can Feed at the Kill.
Figure 2: The Study Area in the Southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, Teton County, Wyoming.
Bed Site Selection by a Subordinate Predator: An Example With the Cougar (Puma Concolor) in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
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Digestibility of an Arboreal Lichen by Mule Deer
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Supplemental Information 1: Red Foxes Scavenging at Mountain Lion Kills. Video by Mark Elbroch
Food Habits of Mountain Goats, Mule Deer, and Cattle on Chopaka Mountain, Washington, 1977-1980
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Reproductive Success of Mule Deer in a Natural Gas Development Area
Wildlife Biology
Evolution
Ecology
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Nature
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Landscape Conservation
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Policy
Law
Probable Causes of Increasing Brucellosis in Free-Ranging Elk of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Ecological Applications
Ecology