PREFACE
BERG T.B., 301.
FULL PAPERS
JUŠKAITIS R., BALČIAUSKAS L., BALTRŪNAITĖ L., AUGUTĖ V.
Dormouse (Gliridae) populations on the northern periphery of their distributional ranges: a review, 302-309.
JUŠKAITIS R., AUGUTĖ V.
The fat dormouse, Glis glis, in Lithuania: living outside the range of the European beech, Fagus sylvatica, 310-315.
KOPPMANN-RUMPF B., SCHERBAUM-HEBERER C., SCHMIDT K.-H.
Influence of mortality and dispersal on sex ratio of the edible dormouse (Glis glis), 316-319.
TROUT R.C., BROOKS S., MORRIS P.
Nest box usage by old edible dormice (Glis glis) in breeding and non-breeding years, 320-324.
SEVIANU E., STERMIN A.N.
Estimation of Muscardinus avellanarius population density by live-trapping, 325-329.
HARRIS W.E., COMBE F.J., BIRD S.
Using integrated population modelling in conservation monitoring: a case study in the common dormouse (Muscardinus avellanarius), 330-336.
ROZYCKA D., LIM J.M., TROUT R.C., BROOKS S.
Have feral boar significantly impacted hazel dormouse populations in Sussex, England?, 337-341.
KELM J., LANGE A., SCHULZ B., GÖTTSCHE M., STEFFENS T., RECK H.
How often does a strictly arboreal mammal voluntarily cross roads? New insights into the behaviour of the hazel dormouse (Muscardinus avellanarius) in roadside habitats, 342-348.
SCHNICK H.H., BÜCHNER S.
The occurrence of the hazel dormouse, Muscardinus avellanarius, in the south-western Baltic region and its biogeographical implications, 349-355.
MAGOMEDOV M.
Assessment of the habitat quality of the forest dormouse (Dryomys nitedula) in Daghestan, Russia: role of foods and vegetation structure, 356-360.
GRIGORYEVA O., KRIVONOGOV D., BALAKIREV A., STAKHEEV V., ANDREYCHEV A., ORLOV V.
Phylogeography of the forest dormouse Dryomys nitedula (Gliridae, Rodentia) in Russian Plain and the Caucasus, 361-364.