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ŠUMARSKI LIST 5-6/2021 str. 73     <-- 73 -->        PDF

In addition to the negative biological effects within population/species, border fences break the connectivity of the Natura 2000 network in Europe and violate several major wildlife treaties (Linnell et al., 2016a, 2016b), challenging the policies of European Union (e.g. EEC Habitats directive and Convention on Biological Diversity), and creating a dangerous precedent for other activities that affect the connectivity of ecosystems.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
ZAHVALA
The authors would like to thank to all gamekeepers for great assistance in collecting data on ungulate mortality in fences along Hungary–Croatia border. Special thanks for the photos’ provider: Damir Damjanov, Vlado Salonja, and Zlatko Anadrašević. This study was supported by the RESBIOS European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program (No. 872146). Both Slovene co-authors of the paper are members of the research program Forest biology, ecology and technology (P4–0107) which is financed by the Slovenian Research Agency. We would like to thank the Editor in chief, Prof. Josip Margaletić, the reviewer, Prof. Krešimir Krapinec, and the anonymous reviewer for their helpful comments on earlier draft of the manuscript.
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