Kalin A. Kellie
Alaska Department of Fish and Game
9 Papers
17 Citations
Kalin A. Kellie is an academic researcher from Alaska Department of Fish and Game. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Alaska moose. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 9 publications.
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Papers
Managing for Elevated Yield of Moose in Interior Alaska
TL;DR: Elevated yield and density of moose was described in GMU 20A because moose were reproducing at the lowest rate measured among wild, noninsular North American populations and higher bear predation rates can create challenges for those desiring rapid increases in sustained yield.
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Coarse-Scale Distribution Surveys and Occurrence Probability Modeling for Wolverine in Interior Alaska
TL;DR: In this article, the authors determined the distribution and occurrence probability of wolverine tracks using aerial surveys and hierarchical spatial modeling in a 180,000-km2 portion of Interior Alaska, USA.
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Fire-mediated patterns of habitat use by male moose (Alces alces) in Alaska
Casey L. Brown,Knut Kielland,Eugénie S. Euskirchen,Todd J. Brinkman,Roger W. Ruess,Kalin A. Kellie +5 more
TL;DR: This work evaluates the relative influence of a regenerating burn on winter forage production and duration, offtake, nutritional quality, and seasonal moose habitat use, and uses data from 14 GPS collared male moose in the 20-year-old Hajdukovich Creek Burn in interior Alaska to generate seasonal dynamic Brownian bridge movement models.
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Behavioral modifications by a large-northern herbivore to mitigate warming conditions.
Jyoti S. Jennewein,Mark Hebblewhite,Peter J. Mahoney,Sophie L. Gilbert,Arjan J. H. Meddens,Natalie T. Boelman,Kyle Joly,Kimberly Jones,Kalin A. Kellie,Scott M. Brainerd,Lee A. Vierling,Jan U. H. Eitel +11 more
TL;DR: Understanding habitat selection related to behavioral thermoregulation is a first step toward identifying areas capable of providing thermal relief for moose and other species impacted by climate change in arctic-boreal regions.
Applications of resilience theory in management of a moose–hunter system in Alaska
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated wildfire-related effects on a slow ecological variable, i.e., forage production, and fast social-ecological variables, such as seasonal harvest rates, hunter access, and forage offtake, in a moose-hunter system in interior Alaska.