id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-021374-srpg754h Lavoie, Maxime Lynx canadensis (Carnivora: Felidae) 2019-12-10 .txt text/plain 13996 748 64 Mean measurements (mm, n, range or SD) of males and females, respectively, were: total length 1,030 (4, 995-1,050), 980 (7, 950-1,010); length of tail 140 (4, 100-150), 110 (8, 100-140); length of hind foot 250 (4, 230-260), 230 (8, 220-240) in Alaska (Berrie 1971) ; total length 920 (12, 850-1,050), 860 (11, ; length of tail 110 (12, 100-120), 100 (11, ; length of hind foot 230 (12, 220-250), 220 (11, in Alberta (van Zyll de Jong 1975) ; total length 892.6 (96, 736.6-1,066.8), 844.0 (89, 762.0-965.2); length of tail 104.6 (96, 50.8-127.0), 97.0 (95, 76.2-121.9); length of hind foot 234.2 (95, 203.2-260.4), 223.0 (89, 190.5-247.7) in Newfoundland (Saunders 1964) ; height at chest 467 (30, ± 10.4), 422 (15, ± 6.3) in the Northwest Territories (Murray and Boutin 1991) ; total length 852.8 (120, ± 3.21), 812.7 (118, ± 3.00) in Ontario (Quinn and Gardner 1984) . Population characteristics.-Lynx canadensis is a snowshoe hare specialist, and its ecology, morphology, and behavior reflect closely that of its main prey (O'Donoghue et al. L. canadensis dynamics might differ in populations in southern latitudes because fluctuation in snowshoe hares is more stable than in the north (Koehler 1990 ) because alternate preys are more abundant (Roth et al. Lynx canadensis densities vary greatly during a snowshoe hare cycle ranging from 2.0 to 44.9/100 km 2 . ./cache/cord-021374-srpg754h.txt ./txt/cord-021374-srpg754h.txt