Response of carnivores to existing highway culverts and underpasses: implications for road planning and mitigation.

Roads with high traffic volumes are a source of animal mortality, can disrupt normal animal movements and dispersal, and may represent a potentially serious threat to wildlife population stability and viability. Retrofitting existing structures built for other purposes (e.g., drainage culverts or small below-grade access roads) to facilitate wildlife crossing by animals and to reduce mortality may be expensive if modifications to the existing structures themselves were involved. However, the environmental context surrounding these structures may influence the willingness of animals to cross, and management of some of these attributes may enhance the attractiveness of these structures. Culverts and underpasses are two common structures along roads in Portugal. We quantified the response of small and medium-sized carnivores to the presence of both types of existing passages by determining: (1) frequency of …

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Grilo C. Bissonette J.A. y Santos-Reis M. Response of carnivores to existing highway culverts and underpasses: implications for road planning and mitigation. Springer Netherlands, 2008. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-008-9374-8

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Retrieved: 24 Jan 2025 02:53:59

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Resource type Text
Date of creation 2024-12-02
Date of last revision 2025-01-23
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Metadata identifier 78e5fbb7-4fc7-5bfe-a246-9162ba462c67
Metadata language Spanish
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Name of the dataset creator Grilo, C., Bissonette, J.A. y Santos-Reis, M.
Name of the dataset editor Springer Netherlands
Other identifier DOI: 10.1007/s10531-008-9374-8
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