Wildlife Damage Management, Internet Center for
Sheep & Goat Research Journal
A peer-reviewed journal, published by The American Sheep Industry Association.
The Sheep & Goat Research Journal began in the 1980s because sheep producers, extension professionals, researchers and others saw the need for a vehicle where practical, adaptive sheep research could be published. The Journal provides authors an avenue to publish peer-reviewed research.
Users are encouraged to browse, read, download, save, print, and link to articles or documents found on this site, but are admonished not to re-publish, re-post, mirror, or otherwise re-distribute materials without the permission of the original copyright holders.
ARTICLES FROM 2004
- Review of Canid Management in Australia for the Protection of Livestock and Wildlife — Potential Application to Coyote Management, L. R. Allen and P. J. S. Fleming
- Economic Impact of Protected Large Carnivores on Sheep Farming in Norway, Leif Jarle Asheim and Ivar Mysterud
- Livestock Depredations by Black Vultures and Golden Eagles, Michael L. Avery and J. L. Cummings
- Managing Wolf Depredation in the United States: Past, Present, and Future, Stewart Breck and Tom Meier
- Compensation Programs in Wyoming for Livestock Depredation by Large Carnivores, M. T. Bruscino and T. L. Cleveland
- Predacides for Canid Predation Management, K. A. Fagerstone, J. J. Johnston, and P. J. Savarie
- The History of Federal and Cooperative Animal Damage Control, Donald W. Hawthorne
- Indirect Effects of Carnivores on Livestock Foraging Behavior and Production, Larry D. Howery and Thomas J. DeLiberto
- Economic Impact of Sheep Predation in the United States, Keithly Jones
- Coyote in the Edwards Plateau of Texas — an Update, Gary Nunley
- Feral Swine Impacts on Agriculture and the Environment, Nathan W. Seward, Kurt C. VerCauteren, Gary W. Witmer, and Richard M. Engeman
- Predation and Livestock Production: Perspective and Overview, Maurice Shelton
- Non-lethal Alternatives for Predation Management, John A. Shivik
- Direct, Spillover, and Intangible Benefits of Predation Management, Stephanie A. Shwiff and Mike J. Bodenchuk
- Coyote Predation Management: An Economic Analysis of Increased Antelope Recruitment and Cattle Production in South Central Wyoming, Stephanie A. Shwiff and Rod J. Merrell
- Using Genetic Analyses to Identify Predators, C. L. WIlliams and J. J. Johnston
