'So cinaclarify namin, ano bang mangyayari, ang
gulo gulo niyo.
There is not much love for the wolverine, whose scientific name is
Gulo gulo, which means glutton in Latin.
Occurrence of the ear canker mite, Otodectes cynotis (Hering), on the Wolverine
Gulo gulo (L.).
Using the case of the wolverine
Gulo gulo in the Scandinavian Peninsula, we explore the two above mentioned questions: 1) we produce an empirical assessment of the benefits deriving from data sharing for the demographic monitoring of trans-boundary populations of elusive species; 2) we assess the relative performance of two demographic monitoring systems, one relying on a simple count-based index of population trend, the other resulting from a long-term noninvasive genetic sampling and the application of capture-recapture models.
Other forest carnivores detected included Bobcat (Lynx rufus), Black Bear (Ursus americanus), Mountain Lion (Puma concolor), Northern Raccoon (Procyon lotor), American Mink (Neovison vison), weasel (Mustela spp.), and skunk (Mephitis mephitis, Spilogale gracilis); but we did not detect Wolverine (
Gulo gulo), Canada Lynx (Lynx canadensis), Fisher (Martes pennanti), or Gray Wolf (Canis lupus).
ang
gulo gulo na nga ng buhay ko makikisama pa ako," explained Ai Ai.
The wolverine (
Gulo gulo) is a large terrestrial weasel (8-18 kg) that has a circumboreal distribution and occupies a cold relatively unproductive niche (Copeland and Whitman, 2003; Inman et al., 2012a, b).
at ak in After flying into Rovaniemi Arctic Circle, I made the hour-long drive to Ranua Wildlife Park, stayed in one of the new lodges the
Gulo Gulo holiday village.
The wolverine in Oregon is listed as a threatened species, and district wildlife biologist Vic Coggins says although biologists have long thought the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest and Eagle Cap Wildnerness should be good habitat for the 25-pound
Gulo gulo, as they are known in scientific nomenclature, "This is the first confirmation of a wolverine in Wallowa County.
The main data (outside the OVC-area) were collected by the field workers of Natural Heritage Services simultaneously with snow-tracking studies of big carnivores (Canis lupus,
Gulo gulo, and Lynx lynx), searching nests of golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos), and controlling hunting and other activities in the wilderness.