Slavc

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Slavc an entity of type: Arachnid

Slavc (pronounced [ˈslawts], diminutive of Slavko) is a male wolf whose migration was being electronically tracked by the University of Ljubljana's Biology department between July 2011 and August 2012, through usage of a GPS-GSM wildlife collar. The wolf was being tracked as part of an EU-project named SloWolf. His location was transmitted every three hours. Slavc was born as part of the wolf pack named Slavnik. The wolf pack Slavnik inhabits the area roughly from Trieste in Italy, through Hrpelje-Kozina in Slovenia up to the Učka mountain range in Croatia. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Slavc
rdf:langString Slavc
rdf:langString Slovenia, Slavnik Pack
xsd:integer 43522654
xsd:integer 1051406211
xsd:integer 2009
rdf:langString Male
rdf:langString Canis lupus
<second> 6.31152E7
rdf:langString Slavc (pronounced [ˈslawts], diminutive of Slavko) is a male wolf whose migration was being electronically tracked by the University of Ljubljana's Biology department between July 2011 and August 2012, through usage of a GPS-GSM wildlife collar. The wolf was being tracked as part of an EU-project named SloWolf. His location was transmitted every three hours. Slavc was born as part of the wolf pack named Slavnik. The wolf pack Slavnik inhabits the area roughly from Trieste in Italy, through Hrpelje-Kozina in Slovenia up to the Učka mountain range in Croatia. In July 2011, he was collared by the biologist Hubert Potočnik. Slavc had stayed with his pack until December of the same year. His dispersal from the pack had started on 19 December 2011. At the beginning of his journey he initially headed southwards, towards Ćićarija. He then headed northwards where he traversed Vipava Valley, Trnova forest, went through Ljubljana Basin and reached the vicinity of Klagenfurt within 10 days. The data transmitted by his collar suggests that Slavc had swum across the Drava river at a location where the river is 280 metres (920 ft) wide with no bridges nearby. Some of the mountain passes the wolf crossed were at elevations of 2,600 metres (8,500 ft) and with snow covers that were 6 metres (20 ft) deep. By March 2012 Slavc had arrived in the Valpolicella, part of Verona province in Italy. His sighting was the first sighting of a wolf in the wild in Verona in more than 130 years. He then moved back north towards the Lessinia Regional Nature Park. Park managers had given word to Slovene biologists about tracks of two canids that they had found there. The wolf had met a female mate there, nicknamed Juliet. Slavc's collar was programmed to drop off automatically in August 2012. Slavc is assumed to be still in Lessinia where he had two pups with his mate. Latest information indicates that the pair had another litter in 2014. The journey has seen Slavc travel for around 2,000 kilometres (1,200 mi) in total.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6616

data from the linked data cloud