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Dr. Clayton Lamb, a researcher with UBC Okanagan's Irving K. Barber Faculty of Science, led a team that recently published a paper detailing the migration patterns of several threatened caribou herds.
Bird Migration Shifts Climate change has been ongoing for decades, and as average temperatures around the world and in the ...
Since its founding on August 25, 1916, the U.S. National Park Service has assembled 419 protected units, of which 62 hold the ...
Decades of caribou research show the proposed road would disrupt migration, fragment habitat and harm food security in rural ...
Caribou are also found throughout Canada's portion of the range. MIGRATION: Mountain caribou gather in small herds of four to 50 individuals. They do not participate in extensive migrations like their ...
With heavily muscled bodies, skinny legs, and strong hooves that balloon to the size of dinner plates come winter, mountain caribou — the "mountain ecotype" of the woodland caribou — are well adapted ...
On one side are the militantly traditionalist Gwich'in—7,000 people living in 15 settlements scattered along the caribou's migration route between northeastern Alaska and the Canadian Yukon.
I was especially amazed by the arctic landscapes of Canada and Alaska where we filmed the Caribou Migration. For thousands of kilometres there is no infrastructure, there are no roads, telephone ...
Almost four hours later, still trudging through the snow and out of breath, I started to realize the enormity of the task that lay ahead for us trying to follow the caribou migration on foot.