Range Constraints for Introduced Elk in Southwest Yukon, Canada

被引:0
|
作者
Strong, Wayne L. [1 ]
Chambers, Jesse H. S. [2 ]
Jung, Thomas S. [3 ]
机构
[1] Arctic Inst North Amer, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada
[2] Univ Calgary, Fac Environm Design, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada
[3] Yukon Dept Environm, Whitehorse, YT Y1A 2C6, Canada
关键词
boreal forest; Cervus; ecology; elk; forage; habitat; introduction; parkland; range; Yukon; CERVUS-ELAPHUS; HABITAT; UNGULATE; DEER; TRANSLOCATION; COLONIZATION; PREDATION; DYNAMICS; DROUGHT; SUCCESS;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Forage availability, snow depths, and winter temperatures were assessed to determine if they might impose range constraints on introduced elk (Cervus elaphus) that voluntarily colonized a 95 km(2) area of southwest Yukon (Canada) in 1959. Parkland-like vegetation of stunted aspen (Populus tremuloides) and nonforest upland plant communities, which is atypical vegetation for a boreal forest environment, composed 30% of the colonized area. About 95% of the area produced less than 300 kg/ha of forage, which represents poor productivity compared to more southern elk ranges. In the remaining 5%, indigenous graminoid communities produced (average +/- SD) 408 +/- 131 kg/ha of forage, exceeded only by nonindigenous roadside vegetation with 652 115 kg/ha. Data from radio-collared animals indicated that most elk occurrences (38% year-round) were associated with parkland-like vegetation, and fecal pellet groups were six times as frequent in indigenous graminoid vegetation as in forest vegetation. Late February 2011 snow depths of 41 +/- 7 cm, during a year with a below-normal snowfall, suggested a potential for reduced winter access to forage. Meteorological data from 1981-2010 indicate that one-third of winter daily minima in the study area were likely lower than -20 degrees C, a threshold below which the metabolism of an elk calf must increase to maintain its body temperature. Each-assessed habitat variable was unfavorable to elk compared with other western North American winter ranges, which may have limited the development of a more robust population in the southwestern Yukon.
引用
收藏
页码:470 / 482
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] ROCK GLACIERS OF THE DALTON RANGE, KLUANE RANGES, SOUTHWEST YUKON TERRITORY, CANADA
    JOHNSON, PG
    LACASSE, D
    JOURNAL OF GLACIOLOGY, 1988, 34 (118) : 327 - 332
  • [2] ORIGIN OF DERMACENTOR ALBIPICTUS (ACARI: IXODIDAE) ON ELK IN THE YUKON, CANADA
    Leo, Sarah S. T.
    Samuel, William M.
    Pybus, Margo J.
    Sperling, Felix A. H.
    JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE DISEASES, 2014, 50 (03) : 544 - 551
  • [3] Glacier subsurface heat-flux characterizations for energy-balance modelling in the Donjek Range, southwest Yukon, Canada
    Wheler, Brett A.
    Flowers, Gwenn E.
    JOURNAL OF GLACIOLOGY, 2011, 57 (201) : 121 - 133
  • [6] Ethnographic and archaeological investigations of alpine ice patches in southwest Yukon, Canada
    Hare, PG
    Greer, S
    Gotthardt, R
    Farnell, R
    Bowyer, V
    Schweger, C
    Strand, D
    ARCTIC, 2004, 57 (03) : 260 - 272
  • [7] Igneous and metaigneous age constraints for the Aishihik metamorphic suite, southwest Yukon
    Johnston, ST
    Mortensen, JK
    Erdmer, P
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 1996, 33 (11) : 1543 - 1555
  • [8] Late Holocene moisture balance variability in the southwest Yukon territory, Canada
    Anderson, Lesleigh
    Abbott, Mark B.
    Finney, Bruce P.
    Burns, Stephen J.
    QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2007, 26 (1-2) : 130 - 141
  • [9] Unstable climate−growth relations for white spruce in southwest Yukon, Canada
    Raphaël D. Chavardès
    Lori D. Daniels
    Patrick O. Waeber
    John L. Innes
    Craig R. Nitschke
    Climatic Change, 2013, 116 : 593 - 611
  • [10] Stratigraphy of Pleistocene glaciations in the St Elias Mountains, southwest Yukon, Canada
    Turner, Derek G.
    Ward, Brent C.
    Froese, Duane G.
    Lamothe, Michel
    Bond, Jeffrey D.
    Bigelow, Nancy H.
    BOREAS, 2016, 45 (03) : 521 - 536