Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center

Statistics for Wildlifers: How much and what kind?

Literature Cited


Anderson, D. R., K. P. Burnham, W. R. Gould, and S. Cherry.  2001.  Concerns 
     about finding effects that are spurious.  Wildlife Society Bulletin 
     29:311-316.
     
Burnham, K. P., and D. R. Anderson.  1998.  Model selection and inference: a 
     practical information-theoretic approach.  Springer-Verlag, New York, 
     New York, USA.
     
Caughley, G., and A. R. E. Sinclair.  1994.  Wildlife ecology and management.  
     Blackwell Scientific, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

Hilborn, R., and M. Mangel.  1997.  The ecological detective: confronting 
     models with data.  Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, USA.

Hurlbert, S. H.  1984.  Pseudoreplication and the design of ecological field 
     experiments.  Ecological Mongoraphs 54:187-211.

Nowak, M. A., and R. M. May.  2000.  Virus dynamics: mathematical principles of 
     immunology and virology.  Oxford University, Oxford, United Kingdom.

Savage, L. J.  1977.  The shifting foundations of statistics.  Pages 3-18 in 
     R. G. Clodny, editor.  Logic, laws, and life: some philosophical 
     complications.  University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.

White, G. C.  2001.  Why take calculus?  Rigor in wildlife management.  
     Wildlife Society Bulletin 29:380-386.

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