Newstral
Article
LA Times on 2022-10-20 17:04
Mountain lions face greater risk of becoming roadkill in wildfire’s aftermath, study says
Related news
- Lockdowns Spared Millions of Animals From Becoming Roadkill, Researchers SayThe New York Times
- SNew Study Shows Wildfires Drive L.A.’s Mountain Lions to Take Deadly Riskssmmirror.com
- Hurricane Ian's aftermath becoming clear for Floridarssfeeds.king5.com
- Volunteers hope roadkill photos spark animal crossingsSanta Cruz Sentinel
- Coronavirus lockdowns spared millions of animals from becoming roadkill, researchers saystaradvertiser.com
- Oklahoma Joe: Becoming greater winners in lifejournalrecord.com
- Less driving means less roadkill, and safer mountain lions, during pandemicocregister.com
- DLess driving on California roads means less roadkill, and safer mountain lions, during pandemicdailydemocrat.com
- Wildfire’s aftermath - Possum Kingdom five years laterStar Telegram
- Rocky Mountain National Park sees greater public acceptance for timed-entry reservation policyDenver Post
- Mountain lion cubs Holly and Hazel becoming friends and building their fan baseLA Times
- SAdult female P-65 is the first mountain lion in study to die of complications from mangesmdp.com
- CLargest U.S. roadkill database highlights hotspots on Bay Area highwayscontracostatimes.com
- LA mountain lions face the flameshcn.org
- Wildfire’s toll heavy on giant sequoias, scientists reportArkansas Online
- Aftermathnwaonline.com
- 4 new mountain lion kittens found in Southern California mountainsSFGate