• Associational relationships at multiple spatial scales affect forest damage by moose 

      Herfindal, Ivar; Tremblay, Jean-Pierre; Hester, Alison J.; Lande, Unni Støbet; Wam, Hilde K (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2015)
      Increasing abundance of large herbivores combined with changes in forestry practices has led to increased forest damage in many temperate and boreal forest areas. The role of alternative forage as a driver for browsing ...
    • Elgbeitetakst i Salsbruket 2013 

      Lande, Unni Støbet; Herfindal, Ivar; Wam, Hilde K (Bioforsk Rapport;, Research report, 2013)
      Bioforsk takserte elgbeitene i Salsbruket juli 2013. Salsbruket utgjør i overkant av 500 000 sammenhengende daa med utmark i kystskogregionen av Trøndelag. Som elgbeite er området preget av lav skoggrense (200-300 moh), ...
    • Heart rate sensor validation and seasonal and diurnal variation of body temperature and heart rate in domestic sheep 

      Fuchs, Boris; Sørheim, Kristin; Chincarini, Matteo; Brunberg, Emma; Stubsjøen, Solveig Marie; Bratbergsengen, Kjell; Hvasshovd, Svein-Olaf; Zimmermann, Barbara; Lande, Unni Støbet; Grøva, Lise (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019)
      Advantages of low input livestock production on large pastures, including animal welfare, biodiversity and low production costs are challenged by losses due to undetected disease, accidents and predation. Precision livestock ...
    • Long term effects of red deer browsing and an extreme winter drought event on bilberry in boreal forests 

      Hafsås, Hallvard (Master thesis, 2022)
      Forandringer i klima, arealbruk og viltforvaltning har ført til endringer i nivå og type av forstyrrelser i norske boreale skoger. Blåbær er en nøkkelart i boreale økosystem og det er kjent at den blir påvirket av beiting ...
    • Weather affects temporal niche partitioning between moose and livestock 

      Herfindal, Ivar; Lande, Unni Støbet; Solberg, Erling Johan; Rolandsen, Christer Moe; Roer, Ole; Wam, Hilde Karine (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2017)
      Co-existing species at the same trophic level often segregate with respect to diet, habitat use, or spatial distribution, reducing their direct competition for resources. However, temporal patterns in species-specific ...