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References
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[1]
[PDF] What is an apex predator? - Global Trophic Cascades ProgramApex predators are primarily known for their role as inhibitors of population irruptions of prey and smaller predators, an effect that cascades throughout ...
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[2]
What is an apex predator? - Charles Darwin UniversityAbstract. Large 'apex' predators influence ecosystems in profound ways, by limiting the density of their prey and controlling smaller 'mesopredators'.
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[3]
Lethal control of an apex predator has unintended cascading effects ...Apex predators typically have conspicuous effects on the populations and phenotypes of prey and smaller predators (mesopredators) that arise from direct killing ...
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[4]
What is an apex predator? | Oikos JournalMar 10, 2015 · Our analysis suggests that predator status is generally fixed, and that several apex predators can coexist within a single ecosystem. Thus, ...
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[5]
Ecosystem context and historical contingency in apex predator ...May 27, 2016 · Apex predator restoration differs from restoration of lower trophic levels because predators as individuals tend to have greater food resource ...
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[6]
Loss of an apex predator in the wild induces physiological and ...Jan 26, 2022 · Loss of an apex predator in the wild induces physiological and behavioural changes in prey · Abstract. Predators can impact prey via predation or ...
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[7]
Reply to Roopnarine: What is an apex predator? - PMCMar 4, 2014 · Apex predators are most commonly defined by trophic dynamics and are species that occupy the highest trophic levels and are crucial in ...Missing: peer- | Show results with:peer-
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[8]
The roles of humans and apex predators in sustaining ecosystem ...Aug 8, 2022 · Wallach et al. (2015) described humans as a special case of mesopredator release, not an apex predator. Humans have been described as ' ...
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[10]
Apex Predators- Definition, Trophic Cascade, ExamplesAug 3, 2023 · Apex predators are commonly referred to as the top predators in the ecological food chain. They bear the top-most rank in the herbivore-carnivore food chain.Trophic Cascade Theory and... · Conservation of Apex Predators
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[11]
Human and apex predators shape lower trophic levels through top ...Apex predators suppress and facilitate prey populations. •. Mesopredators and prey species coexist within the ecosystem. •. Emphasized importance of both bottom ...
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[12]
Animal Adaptations - Teachers (U.S. National Park Service)Oct 25, 2022 · The physical adaptations that make mountain lions successful predators include powerful jaws that can crush a prey's neck in one bite, sharp ...<|separator|>
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[13]
Predatorial Borings in Late Precambrian Mineralized ExoskeletonsIf true, this would be the oldest case of predation in the fossil record and ... Adaptive responses in Cambrian predator and prey highlight the arms ...<|separator|>
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[14]
Predatorial borings in late precambrian mineralized exoskeletonsThe late Precambrian tube-forming Cloudina, the earliest known animal ... If true, this would be the oldest case of predation in the fossil record and ...
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[15]
Tiny vampires in ancient seas: evidence for predation via perforation ...May 25, 2016 · These holes provide the earliest direct fossil evidence for predation ... Precambrian record of predation is virtually non-existent. The ...
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[16]
Raptorial appendages of the Cambrian apex predator Anomalocaris ...Jul 5, 2023 · The stem-group euarthropod Anomalocaris canadensis is one of the largest Cambrian animals and is often considered the quintessential apex ...
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[17]
Cambrian apex predator probably preferred soft-bodied preyJul 5, 2023 · Living during the Cambrian Period, Anomalocaris was one of the biggest animals and top predators at the time. At this point in the history ...
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[18]
Apex predator of the Cambrian likely sought soft over crunchy preyJul 4, 2023 · The 2-foot (60 centimeter) marine animal Anomalocaris canadensis was likely much weaker than once assumed.
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[19]
Cambrian Predator and Prey Highlight “Arms Race” | AMNHJan 3, 2025 · Cambrian Predator and Prey Highlight ... “This critically important evolutionary record demonstrates, for the first time, that predation ...
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[20]
Devonian Period | Natural History MuseumOct 29, 2012 · The Devonian* saw the peak of marine faunal diversity during the Paleozoic Era. New predators such as sharks, bony fishes and ammonoids ruled ...Devonian Period · Devonian Animal (metazoan)... · Brachiopods
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[21]
Ichnofossil record of selective predation by Cambrian trilobitesThe earliest visible evidence for metazoan predation is found in the form of traces in skeletal fossils. Specifically, predatory drill holes, the most common ...
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[22]
11.2: Paleozoic Evolution - Geosciences LibreTextsAug 24, 2024 · Anomalocaris, the apex predator of the Cambrian oceans. By the end of the Cambrian, mollusks, brachiopods, nautiloids, gastropods, graptolites, ...
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[23]
A Summary of Apex Predators in Cretaceous North America - I Know ...This study focuses on the alpha predators during the Cretaceous (namely Acrocanthosaurus atokensis, Siats meekerorum, Lythronax argestes, and Tyrannosaurus rex)<|separator|>
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[24]
Cretaceous Period - University of MissouriOne look at the skeleton of T. rex and it is no wonder that paleontologists presume it was an apex predator, or top of the Cretaceous food chain, hunting prey ...
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[25]
Meet 80 Meat-Eating Dinosaurs of the Mesozoic Era - ThoughtCoAug 22, 2019 · This gallery features 80 meat-eating theropod dinosaurs from the Mesozoic Era, including Abelisaurus, Acrocanthosaurus, and Aerosteon.
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[26]
Mosasaur: The Apex Predator of the Cretaceous OceansSep 17, 2024 · Discover the Mosasaur, the apex predator of Cretaceous oceans, dominating seas with sharp teeth, powerful jaws, and fossil discoveries that ...
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[27]
What (large) predators from the Mesozoic Era could actually detect ...Jan 6, 2018 · The large predators of the Mesozoic fall into seven broad groups: Dinosaurs, crocodylians, pterosaurs, mosasaurs, pistosaurs (plesiosaurs ...If humans lived with dinosaurs in the Mesozoic Era with modern ...What was the largest predator to have lived on land during ... - QuoraMore results from www.quora.com
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[28]
Cretaceous period: Animals, plants and extinction event - Live ScienceJul 26, 2022 · Theropods, including T. rex, continued as apex predators until the end of this period. During the Cretaceous, more ancient birds took flight, ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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[29]
Mammalian Diversification in the Cenozoic - UMD GeologyApr 7, 2024 · ... mammals and other animals. As mammals evolved into apex predators, they required a new specialization: carnassials (shearing premolars and ...
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[30]
In the Paleocene and Eocene Epoch, was Oxyaenidae ever ... - QuoraJun 11, 2019 · Phorusrachids - terror birds - were the apex predator in S America from about 50 MYA until the Pleistocene era, possibly as late as 100,000 ...
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[31]
Cenozoic | U.S. Geological Survey - USGS.govWith their dinosaur competitors gone, many new mammals evolved. The first rodents, armadillos, primitive primates, and ancestors to modern mammalian carnivores ...
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[32]
Evolution in the Cenozoic Era | CK-12 FoundationSome flightless birds were very large and formidable predators at the top of their food chains. Mammals came to occupy almost every available niche both in ...
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[34]
A Realm of Giants - Apex Terrestrial Predators during Cenozoic Era ...Oct 21, 2022 · 1.Barinasuchus - The Largest Prehistoric Land Predator ever during Age of Mammals (Cenozoic) - It's species of large, sebecid mesoeu crocodylian reptile.Can we really consider the Cenozoic as the age of mammals? Like ...Giant Cenozoic land predators : r/Naturewasmetal - RedditMore results from www.reddit.com
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Homo Habilis Were Hunted By Leopards, Challenging Idea They ...Sep 17, 2025 · Around 2 million years ago, prehistoric humans in East Africa turned the tables on the carnivores that had previously terrorized them, ...
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[36]
Baylor University Researcher Finds Earliest Archaeological ...May 9, 2013 · The record shows that Oldowan hominins acquired and butchered numerous small antelope carcasses. These animals are well represented at the site ...
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[37]
Early humans hunted the largest available animals to extinction for ...Dec 21, 2021 · A groundbreaking study by researchers from Tel Aviv University tracks the development of early humans' hunting practices over the last 1.5 million years.
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[38]
Humans were apex predators for two million years, study findsApr 5, 2021 · Tel Aviv University, together with Raphael Sirtoli of Portugal, show that humans were an apex predator for about two million years.
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[39]
Timeline of Human Evolution - Institute of Human Origins... tool use 3.4–3.3 Ma; image is of a rock/stone tool on a dirt background. 11 ... fire use 800 Ka; image is an excavated side of a cave wall with orange ...
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[40]
Human ancestors may have hunted cave bears 300000 years agoMay 15, 2024 · The team closely examined hundreds of cave bear bones, looking for evidence that humans had made the kill and stripped the carcass of its fur ...
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[41]
Forensic evidence suggests Paleo-Americans hunted mastodons ...Jun 14, 2023 · Forensic evidence suggests Paleo-Americans hunted mastodons, mammoths and other megafauna in eastern North America 13,000 years ago · Testing ...
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[42]
Early South American hunters primarily hunted megafauna ...Oct 2, 2025 · Early humans in South America hunted megafauna, shaping ecosystems and driving Pleistocene extinctions.
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[43]
Apex predators can structure ecosystems through trophic cascades ...May 12, 2024 · Apex predators can structure ecosystems through trophic cascades: Linking the frugivorous behaviour and seed dispersal patterns of mesocarnivores.
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Understanding patterns and processes in models of trophic cascadesCascades are said to be 'top-down' if initiated by a change in top predators, but can also be 'bottom-up' if initiated by a change in basal resources such as ...Linear Uptake Responses · Cascade Strength · Marine Food Web Simulations<|separator|>
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Trait-mediated trophic cascade creates enemy-free space ... - ScienceSep 4, 2015 · A “trait-mediated trophic cascade” can be triggered when apex predators cause changes in mesopredators' behavior or other traits, with ...
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[46]
Does restoring apex predators to food webs restore ecosystems ...Jan 30, 2024 · (1960). Trophic cascades occur when apex predators indirectly benefit plants by top-down control of herbivore abundance and/or foraging behavior ...
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[47]
Behavioral responses across a mosaic of ecosystem states ... - PNASMar 8, 2021 · The sea otter–sea urchin–kelp forest trophic cascade in the northern Pacific is perhaps the most well-known example of predator-driven recovery ...
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[48]
Causes and consequences of marine mammal population declines ...The sea otter decline set off a trophic cascade in which the coastal marine ecosystem underwent a phase shift from kelp forests to deforested sea urchin barrens ...
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[49]
Experimental evidence for a behavior-mediated trophic cascade in a ...We tested for density- and behavior-mediated trophic cascade patterns in our three trophic level system of spiders, grasshoppers, and plants based on the ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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[50]
Apex predators and trophic cascades in large marine ecosystemsWhat the authors describe is called a “trophic cascade” in which higher-order consumers significantly affect how organisms interact at three or more lower ...
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[51]
[PDF] Trophic cascades from wolves to alders in YellowstoneOur results are consistent with the hypothesis of a wolf-ungulate-alder trophic cascade in northern Yellowstone, supported by comparisons of alder age structure ...<|separator|>
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[52]
Sampling bias exaggerates a textbook example of a trophic cascadePre‐wolf reintroduction studies predicted no cascading effects of wolves on aspen (reviewed in Yellowstone National Park, 1997), but subsequent studies proposed ...
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Apex predators can structure ecosystems through trophic cascades ...May 12, 2024 · Our study reveals a novel trophic cascade from apex predators to plant communities. The behavioural responses of frugivorous mesocarnivores to ...
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[55]
Wolf Management - Yellowstone National Park (U.S. National Park ...Sep 9, 2025 · We study wolves to understand how they behave as individuals, how they interact within and between packs, and how they influence the ecosystem ...
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Wolf Reintroduction Changes Ecosystem in YellowstoneWolves are causing a trophic cascade of ecological change, including helping to increase beaver populations and bring back aspen, and vegetation.
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[57]
Yellowstone's Wolves: A Debate Over Their Role in the Park's ...Apr 23, 2024 · New research questions the long-held theory that reintroduction of such a predator caused a trophic cascade, spawning renewal of vegetation ...
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[58]
Ecological roles and importance of sharks in the Anthropocene OceanAug 2, 2024 · Tiger sharks and other large species are important to the development, maintenance, and resilience of seagrass and other macrophyte communities ...
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[59]
Effects of Shark Decline - Census of Marine LifePopulation depletion of apex predator shark species has indirect effects on commercially important shellfish species in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean.
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[60]
The Ecological Role of Sharks on Coral Reefs - ScienceDirect.comThe Role of Sharks in Driving Trophic Cascades on Coral Reefs. Sharks have the potential to modify the community structure of marine food webs through direct or ...
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Removal of an apex predator initiates a trophic cascade that extends ...May 10, 2017 · A trophic cascade resulting from an apex predator's lethal effects on herbivores extends to the soil nutrient pool.
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Lions do not change rivers: Complex African savannas preclude top ...Lions and spotted hyaenas negatively influenced the detection probability of black-backed jackals and African wildcats, while leopards had a positive effect on ...
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[63]
Apex predators not a quick fix for restoring ecosystems, 20-year ...Feb 7, 2024 · A Colorado State University experiment spanning more than two decades has found that removal of apex predators from an ecosystem can create lasting changes.
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The primacy of density‐mediated indirect effects in a community of ...Oct 23, 2024 · Multiple predators of elk likely contribute to a trophic cascade in northern Yellowstone National Park through a density-mediated indirect ...
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The Big Scientific Debate: Trophic Cascades (U.S. National Park ...May 16, 2019 · Because Yellowstone had few predators for decades, and now that they're back, we can compare the system before and after predator recovery.
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[66]
Apex predators not a quick fix for restoring ecosystems, 20-year ...Feb 7, 2024 · A Colorado State University experiment spanning more than two decades has found that removal of apex predators from an ecosystem can create lasting changes.
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[67]
Sea otters maintain remnants of healthy kelp forest amid sea urchin ...Mar 8, 2021 · The researchers found that urchins from the kelp beds had much higher nutritional value than those from the urchin barrens, with large, energy- ...
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[68]
Behavioral responses across a mosaic of ecosystem states ...Mar 8, 2021 · The sea otter–sea urchin–kelp forest trophic cascade in the northern Pacific is perhaps the most well-known example of predator-driven recovery ...
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[69]
Sea otters help kelp forests recover — but how fast depends on ...Mar 3, 2025 · New CU Boulder research found sea otters, an important keystone species, play a vital role in kelp forest recovery, but their level of influence depends on ...
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Rewilding Apex Predators Has Effects on Lower Trophic LevelsDec 14, 2022 · We investigated the behavioral responses of five African ungulates to cheetah reintroduction in a semi-arid system affected by bush encroachment.
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[PDF] A review of the trophic cascade concept using the lens of loop analysisTrophic cascades have been assigned an exaggerated even mythic status by some ecologists, but they are only one type of pathway in a complicated food web.
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[72]
Keystone species, facts and photos | National GeographicMay 19, 2020 · Paine's early definition of keystone species was limited to apex predators and their top-down effect on a food web. But in the decades that ...
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Has the Term 'Keystone Species' Lost Its Meaning?May 9, 2024 · Maybe vegetation dominated ecosystems not because producers limited other species, but because predators prevented herbivores from overgrazing.
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Yellowstone Wolves and the Forces That Structure Natural SystemsDec 23, 2014 · The reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone has provided fascinating insights into the ways species interactions within food webs structure ecosystems.
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[PDF] Large Predators, Deer, and Trophic Cascades in Boreal and ...Across a variety of environments, predator extirpation can lead via trophic cascades to habitat degradation at multiple trophic levels, species loss, and even ...Missing: empirical | Show results with:empirical<|separator|>
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[PDF] Trophic Cascades and Keystone Species Film Guide Educator ...An apex predator is a species that sits at the very top of its food web; nothing eats an apex predator. Many apex predators are keystone species, but not all.
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Sampling Bias Shows Wolves Had Inflated Impact on Aspen RegrowthDec 21, 2021 · Trophic cascade is described as an ecological phenomenon that occurs when either adding or removing a top predator from a given landscape which ...
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Trophic cascades and the transient keystone concept - ScienceDirectApex predator reintroductions are commonly motivated by the imperative to restore populations and wider ecosystem function by precipitating trophic cascades ...Missing: empirical | Show results with:empirical
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[80]
They might be right, but give no strong evidence that “trophic ...Dec 15, 2019 · They might be right, but Beschta et al. (2018) give no strong evidence that “trophic cascades shape recovery of young aspen in Yellowstone ...
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[81]
Full article: Revising the Keystone Species Concept for ConservationAug 14, 2024 · The keystone species concept is often used in conservation. However, scientists and conservationists use the concept in many different ways.Missing: apex | Show results with:apex
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The Truth About Apex Predators and Trophic Cascades - ScribehoundSep 13, 2025 · The great foundation myth is the George Monbiot video about the trophic cascade allegedly triggered by reintroducing wolves into Yellowstone.
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The return of the wolf: how much do they help rebuild ecosystems?Jun 23, 2022 · Researchers say the return of wolves to Yellowstone in the 1990s kickstarted big changes in habitats. But that narrative is increasingly being challenged.
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Flawed analysis invalidates claim of a strong Yellowstone trophic ...Oct 13, 2025 · Flawed analysis invalidates claim of a strong Yellowstone trophic cascade after wolf reintroduction: A comment on Ripple et al. (2025).
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[85]
Are top predator always a keystone species? - ResearchGateMar 7, 2018 · Depends on your definition of keystone, but no. A top predator could have little impact, especially if it is a minor player in a guild of top predators.
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[86]
Myths, Wishful Thinking, and Accountability in Predator ... - FrontiersTrophic cascades, specifically how large predators may regulate abundance of herbivores and structure the function of marine and terrestrial ecosystems, capture ...Missing: overstated | Show results with:overstated
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The Impact of Yellowstone's Wolves May Be Overrated - MediumJul 1, 2024 · The re-introduction of wolves into Yellowstone does appear to have provided some benefits that echo up and down the food chain. But the best way ...
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[88]
The top-down vs bottom-up control in an ecosystem - Eco-intelligentApr 26, 2018 · Ecosystems exert control across trophic levels through the top-down approach—where predators control the ecosystem through population ...
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Bottom‐up when it is not top‐down: Predators and plants control ...Mar 1, 2020 · Furthermore, neither predator biomass nor trophic position (via stable isotope analysis) increased with plant biomass, suggesting predators ...1 Introduction · 2.3 Trophic Position · 4 Discussion
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Emergent competition shapes top-down versus bottom-up control in ...Feb 8, 2024 · Patterns of predation in a diverse predator-prey system. Nature ... (bottom-up) versus predators or tertiary consumers (top-down). Their ...
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Bottom‐up and top‐down effects combine to drive predator–prey ...Jul 7, 2025 · Bottom-up and top-down effects combine to drive predator–prey ... The bottom-up effect of producers and the top-down effect of predators ...
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[92]
Interaction between top-down and bottom-up control in marine food ...Feb 6, 2017 · ... and predator–prey interactions has also been clearly demonstrated (15). Seabirds are also important predators and they are considered ...
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[93]
Trophic cascades and top-down control: found at sea - FrontiersThis review investigates the current state of knowledge on trophic control and cascades in marine ecosystems. It critically examines claims that top-down ...
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[94]
Predicting ecological consequences of marine top predator declinesWe outline direct and indirect consequences of marine predator declines and propose an integrated predictive framework that includes risk effects.<|separator|>
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[95]
[PDF] The Rise of the Mesopredator - Wolf Conservation CenterHumans have persecuted apex predators for millennia. From wolves (Canis lupus) in Asia, North America, and Europe to jaguars (Panthera onca) in the Americas ...
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Brief History of Wolves in the Wild - Mission:WolfThe hunting of wolves in America far predates the founding of the U.S. The first documented wolf bounty was instituted in the colony of Massachusetts in 1630; ...
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A Brief History of Wolves and Humans--PART 3 - Rick LamplughSep 27, 2021 · Whittlesey and Schullery found records that show bounties paid on 80,000 wolves from 1883 to 1918 in Montana and on 30,000 wolves in Wyoming ...
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The War on Wolves - Notes From the FrontierNov 15, 2019 · Between 1883 and 1927 Montana paid bounties on a staggering 111,545 wolves and 886,367 coyotes. Subsidizing both ranchers and wolfers, the ...
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[99]
Wolf Wars: America's Campaign to Eradicate the Wolf | Nature - PBSSep 14, 2008 · Bounty programs initiated in the 19th century continued as late as 1965, offering $20 to $50 per wolf. Wolves were trapped, shot, dug from ...
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[100]
Shooting Tigers in Early 20th-Century India - Imperial & Global ForumSep 17, 2018 · Tiger hunts have remained enduring images of extravagance and might of the British Empire in India, and inspired a widely popular imperial mythology.
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Killing the Tiger: 'Shikar' in Colonial India - MAP AcademyOct 10, 2025 · Tiger hunting became an important symbol in the construction of British imperial and masculine identities during the nineteenth century.
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[102]
Lion and Human Coexistence: Why It's Important - RTI InternationalFeb 29, 2024 · A major challenge facing lion populations, specifically within the Kwakuchinja Corridor, is human wildlife conflict, or conflicts local communities face.
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History of Human-Lion Conflict in Northwest NamibiaOct 31, 2021 · This historically-focused paper looks at how humans and lions have interacted on pastoral and within protected area land, in northwest Namibia.
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Human-Lion Conflict and the Reproduction of White Supremacy in ...Oct 29, 2021 · It reveals a history in which Europeans and the state reproduced white supremacy through human-livestock-lion interactions. This deepens the ...
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Predator Management, Human Interaction, and the Concept of ...Oct 7, 2024 · Predator management, through regulated hunting, ensures that wildlife populations remain healthy and that the predators themselves retain their ...
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Predator Management — Furbearer ConservationWolves, bears, cougars and coyotes have all seen heavy focus from hunting critics determined to prove that these apex predators do not need human management.
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History of Wolf Management - Yellowstone National Park (U.S. ...Sep 9, 2025 · In 1987, the USFWS Northern Rocky Mountain Wolf Recovery Plan proposed reintroducing an “experimental population” of wolves into Yellowstone.Early Wolf Management · Restoration Efforts · Legal Challenges
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Culling To Conserve: A Hard Truth For Lion ConservationWhen given adequate space, resources, and protection, lion populations can explode, such as they have done on the Bubye Valley Conservancy. Reducing numbers to ...
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The culling of Alaska's bears and wolves - High Country NewsJan 18, 2024 · The goal was to help the dwindling number of Mulchatna caribou by reducing the number of predators around their calving grounds.
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Predator Compensation - Big Life FoundationThe Predator Compensation Fund (PCF) pays Maasai livestock owners for livestock lost to predators, with the community providing 30% of the compensation.
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Wolf Livestock Loss Demonstration Project Grant ProgramThe program provides funding for prevention of livestock loss from wolf predation and for compensation for losses due to confirmed wolf depredation.
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Paying for the Presence of Predators: An Evolving Approach to ...Many researchers indicate that direct compensation for depredation of livestock does not increase tolerance for predators within ranching communities.
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Operational Activities: Protecting Livestock From PredatorsLivestock producers that use an integrated predator management program, consisting of nonlethal and lethal techniques, are most effective at reducing livestock ...
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[114]
Global wildlife tourism generates five times more revenue than ...In 2018, wildlife tourism directly contributed $120.1bn to global GDP, versus the $23bn in revenue attributed to the illegal trade in wildlife, or 5.2 times ...
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(PDF) Global economic value of shark ecotourism: Implications for ...Aug 6, 2025 · To estimate the economic impact of scuba diving and snorkeling tourism ... Fishing spans all oceans and the impact on ocean predators such as ...<|separator|>
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Issues and Opportunities Associated with Trophy Hunting and ...Apr 1, 2020 · ... conservation of trophy animals [10,11]. A common problem with ... Sport Hunting, Predator Control and Conservation of Large Carnivores.
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One wolf can cost ranchers up to $162K, novel study showsApr 21, 2025 · One wolf can cost ranchers up to $162K, novel study shows · Expanding predator population causes reduced growth and pregnancies in cattle · Media ...
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Colorado Parks and Wildlife to pay ranches $343,000 for wolf damageMar 6, 2025 · The state will pay two Colorado ranching operations a combined $343,000 for livestock killed by wolves and other impacts from the apex predator ...
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Expanding Wolf Population is Costing Cattle Ranchers - UC DavisApr 21, 2025 · “There's not really any research in the state on the economic consequences of an apex predator interacting with livestock,” she said. An ...
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Wolves in the Human Imagination, Wolves in Human HistoriesOct 31, 2024 · Ancient societies idolized and occasionally worshipped wolves as deities, powerful spirits, or companions of the gods: ancient Egyptians, ...
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Eagles in Mesoamerican Thought and Mythology - ResearchGateAmong the apex predators of the air, eagles have always held special significance for both ancient and modem Mesoamerican ·societies. Eagles in general are ...
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The Wolf and Its Use in Mythology - HubPagesMay 8, 2019 · For Europeans, the wolf was usually the apex land predator and it was a rival to the human hunter gathers who shared the environment with it.
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Folklore & Felines: Tigers in Tribal Myths and Local LegendsJun 11, 2025 · Indigenous communities often view the tiger as a guardian of the wild, embodying qualities such as bravery, resilience, and independence.
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Humans as apex predators and ethical actors in a changing societal ...A contemporary management approach: compassionate conservation. Compassionate conservation offers a challenging new paradigm for rethinking approaches to ...
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[125]
[PDF] Predicting ecological consequences of marine top predator declinesMarine top predator declines can cause trophic cascades, through direct mortality and behavioral changes, and influence mesoconsumers and resource species.
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Humans Are Predators of at Least One Third of All Vertebrate SpeciesJun 29, 2023 · That's anywhere from five to 300 times the number of species targeted by other predators with a wide geographical range, such as sharks, birds ...
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Habitat loss is bad news for species – especially for top predatorsOct 28, 2020 · When plants and animals lose their habitats, predator species at the top of the food chain die out first. The results have been published in ...<|separator|>
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[128]
Loss of large predators has caused widespread disruption of ...Jul 14, 2011 · The loss of apex consumers from an ecosystem triggers an ecological phenomenon known as a “trophic cascade,” a chain of effects moving down ...
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Global study finds predators are most likely to be lost when habitats ...Jan 21, 2020 · Global study finds predators are most likely to be lost when habitats are converted for human use - BES is the largest scientific society ...
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Top Fish Predators Could Suffer Wide Habitat Loss by 2100Aug 9, 2023 · Some species of highly migratory fish predators – including sharks, tuna, and billfish, could lose upwards of 70% of suitable habitat by the end of the century.
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Ecosystems take hard hit from loss of top predators - Berkeley NewsJul 14, 2011 · A new paper reviewing the impact of the loss of large predators and herbivores high in the food chain confirms that their decline has had cascading effects.
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New Recommendations for Apex Predator Recovery - NCEASMay 27, 2016 · While over-exploitation and poaching are the most prevalent causes for the decline of these top predators, other human influences can interact ...<|separator|>
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[133]
Ecosystem context and historical contingency in apex predator ...May 27, 2016 · In attempts to combat declines, managers have conducted reintroductions, imposed stricter harvest regulations, and implemented protected areas.
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[134]
A Timeline of the Yellowstone Wolf ReintroductionThe successful reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone in 1995 has been celebrated around the world, and by 2017, wolves were considered sufficiently recovered.Yellowstone National Park Is... · 1914-1926 · January 1996
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Impact of Gray Wolf Reintroduction on Yellowstone EcosystemMar 7, 2025 · "The reintroduction of gray wolves to Yellowstone National Park led to a 1,500% increase in willow crown volume along streamsides, according to ...Missing: outcomes | Show results with:outcomes
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The strength of the Yellowstone trophic cascade after wolf ...The reintroduction of wolves into Yellowstone reveals how recovering ecosystems may diverge from their original states. For example, prior to the return of ...
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[137]
Intended and unintended consequences of wolf restoration to ...Apr 3, 2021 · A change in human attitudes and cultural norms has brought about a recovery in some suitable areas, yet reintroductions are still controversial.
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[138]
Conservation Success Stories: How India Saved the Bengal TigerMar 27, 2023 · The tiger population in India has recovered greatly as a result of the combined efforts of the Indian government, conservation groups, and local ...
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[139]
Bengal Tigers bounce back rapidly in NepalJan 12, 2023 · The number of wild Bengal Tigers in Nepal has nearly tripled, according to the latest National Tiger and Prey Survey.
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[140]
Despite investment in conservation, Bengal tigers still struggling in ...Mar 25, 2024 · Due to inefficient and inadequate measures, Bangladesh lags in achieving success in tiger conservation despite having dedicated significant funds to the effort ...
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Tiger recovery amid people and poverty - ScienceJan 30, 2025 · Tiger absence and extinction were characterized by armed conflict, poverty, and extensive land-use changes. Sparing land for tigers enabled land sharing.
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Kakadu - Australia's Ancient Wilderness - PBSProtection was finally granted in 1971 in the Northern Territory when fewer than 3,000 crocs were estimated to remain out of a former population of close to ...
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The return of the kinga (saltwater crocodile): Population 'bust then ...3. Crocodile protection and population recovery. The Australian saltwater crocodile population was believed to have dropped to only 3000 animals, just prior to ...
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Recovery of saltwater crocodiles following unregulated hunting in ...Jul 20, 2011 · Saltwater crocodiles (Crocodylus porosus) in the Northern Territory of Australia were protected in 1971, after a severe population decline ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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JWM: Problem crocs in Darwin, Australia come from far and wideApr 30, 2024 · “Crocodiles have recovered so well that it's probably fairly difficult for young crocodiles to find new territory,” Banks said, adding that ...
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Why the world's biggest predators are endangeredJun 10, 2016 · “Recovery of apex predators is key because they often provide fundamental services such as disease regulation, the maintenance of biodiversity, ...
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[PDF] 2025 WOLF FURBEARER TRAPPING | Montana FWPWolves - Authorized hunting hours for the taking of wolves on public lands begin one-half hour before sunrise and end one-half hour after sunset each day of the ...
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Wyoming Eyes Higher Predator Quotas - Mountain JournalJun 5, 2025 · CORRECTION: A previous version of this article stated that Wyoming wolf hunting seasons run from September 15 to March 31 in the Wolf Trophy ...<|separator|>
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Trophy Hunting – A Complex Picture - Conservation FrontlinesMost species, such as lions, may be hunted perfectly sustainably, without any negative impacts on their populations, behavior or genetics—provided strict quotas ...
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Trophy Hunting: Should We Kill Animals to Save Them?Trophy hunting fees help fund conservation. Critics say the benefits are exaggerated and that killing big game animals is wrong.
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Sustainable strategies for harvesting predators and prey in a ...Jan 15, 2021 · Our study finds optimal strategies for harvesting interacting species affected by environmental variations (ie, correlated noises)Missing: apex | Show results with:apex
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Bridging the implementation gap: From predator control to non ...Jul 30, 2025 · Diversionary feeding provided alternative food to predators over 8 weeks to reduce predation on ground nests. The outcome, an 83% reduction in ...
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Predator Control Needs a Standard of Unbiased Randomized ...Dec 11, 2019 · Lack of solid scientific evidence precludes strong inference about responses of predators, people, and prey of both, to various types of ...Missing: balanced empirical<|control11|><|separator|>