photo
modulo_compartir class=”disposicion_vertical lynx cub with a rabbit, their main food.
Send to Myspace Send to Reddit Send to Eskup
Share Print Save
O 900 copies or none. That is the medium-term future (2050) for the world’s most endangered feline: the Iberian lynx. It is estimated that approximately 250 animals are released, grouped into two nuclei: Doñana and Sierra Morena. And the difference is that they take into account the effects of climate change on their
habitat or not, as published Nature Climate Change. and, if it does, perhaps, suggest the authors, should be consider introducing the animal in the northern regions of the peninsula, instead of insisting that extends into what has been their traditional habitat. “The reintroduction should rethink plans beyond historically associated areas this species to other regions in the future, they have the right conditions for its viability,” says the researcher from the National Museum of Natural Sciences, CSIC Miguel Bastos Araújo, who led the research.
class=”sin_enlace”> more
- lynx emerges from its burrow
- other Peninsula Bobcats
- approach Castilla-La Mancha
Lynx reintroduced