Behavioral effects of wolf presence on moose habitat selection: testing the landscape of fear hypothesis in an anthropogenic landscape

被引:0
|
作者
Håkan Sand
Mark Jamieson
Henrik Andrén
Camilla Wikenros
Joris Cromsigt
Johan Månsson
机构
[1] Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,Grimsö Wildlife Research Station, Department of Ecology
[2] Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Environmental Studies
来源
Oecologia | 2021年 / 197卷
关键词
Habitat heterogeneity; Landscape of risk; Predation; Vegetation cover; Open habitat;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Landscape of fear refers to the spatial variation in prey perception of predation risk, that under certain conditions, may lead to changes in their behavior. Behavioral responses of prey in relation to large carnivore predation risk have mainly been conducted in areas with low anthropogenic impact. We used long-term data on the distribution of moose in different habitat types in a system characterized by intensive management of all three trophic levels (silviculture, harvest of wolves and moose) to study effects on moose habitat selection resulting from the return of an apex predator, the wolf. We assumed that coursing predators such as wolves will cause an increased risk for moose in some habitat types and tested the hypotheses that moose will avoid open or young forest habitats following wolf establishment. After wolf recolonization, moose reduced their use of one type of open habitat (bog) but there was neither change in the use of the other open habitat type (clear-cut), nor in their use of young forest. Wolf establishment did not influence the use of habitat close to dense habitat when being in open habitats. Thus, the effect of wolves varied among habitat types and there was no unidirectional support for a behavioral effect of wolves’ establishment on moose habitat use. Human-driven habitat heterogeneity, concentration of moose forage to certain habitat types, and the effects of a multiple predator guild on moose may all contribute to the results found. We conclude that the landscape of fear is likely to have weak ecological effects on moose in this system.
引用
收藏
页码:101 / 116
页数:15
相关论文
共 40 条
  • [1] Behavioral effects of wolf presence on moose habitat selection: testing the landscape of fear hypothesis in an anthropogenic landscape
    Sand, Hakan
    Jamieson, Mark
    Andren, Henrik
    Wikenros, Camilla
    Cromsigt, Joris
    Mansson, Johan
    OECOLOGIA, 2021, 197 (01) : 101 - 116
  • [2] Habitat selection of a large carnivore, the red wolf, in a human-altered landscape
    Dellinger, Justin A.
    Proctor, Christine
    Steury, Todd D.
    Kelly, Marcella J.
    Vaughan, Michael R.
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2013, 157 : 324 - 330
  • [3] Modelling the negative effects of landscape fragmentation on habitat selection
    van Langevelde, Frank
    ECOLOGICAL INFORMATICS, 2015, 30 : 271 - 276
  • [4] Wolf pack rendezvous site selection in Greece is mainly affected by anthropogenic landscape features
    Yorgos Iliopoulos
    Dionisios Youlatos
    Stefanos Sgardelis
    European Journal of Wildlife Research, 2014, 60 : 23 - 34
  • [5] Wolf pack rendezvous site selection in Greece is mainly affected by anthropogenic landscape features
    Iliopoulos, Yorgos
    Youlatos, Dionisios
    Sgardelis, Stefanos
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE RESEARCH, 2014, 60 (01) : 23 - 34
  • [6] Fear factor:: prey habitat selection and its consequences in a predation risk landscape
    Thomson, Robert L.
    Forsman, Jukka T.
    Sarda-Palomera, Francesc
    Monkkonen, Mikko
    ECOGRAPHY, 2006, 29 (04) : 507 - 514
  • [7] Timber-management and natural-disturbance effects on moose habitat: Landscape evaluation
    Rempel, RS
    Elkie, PC
    Rodgers, AR
    Gluck, MJ
    JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT, 1997, 61 (02): : 517 - 524
  • [8] Habitat Fragmentation, Variable Edge Effects, and the Landscape-Divergence Hypothesis
    Laurance, William F.
    Nascimento, Henrique E. M.
    Laurance, Susan G.
    Andrade, Ana
    Ewers, Robert M.
    Harms, Kyle E.
    Luizao, Regina C. C.
    Ribeiro, Jose E.
    PLOS ONE, 2007, 2 (10):
  • [9] Effects of habitat transitions on rainforest bird communities across an anthropogenic landscape mosaic
    Huang, Guohualing
    Catterall, Carla P.
    BIOTROPICA, 2021, 53 (01) : 130 - 141
  • [10] Eurasian lynx habitat selection in human-modified landscape in Norway: Effects of different human habitat modifications and behavioral states
    Bouyer, Yaelle
    Martin, Gilles San
    Poncin, Pascal
    Beudels-Jamar, Roseline C.
    Odden, John
    Linnell, John D. C.
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2015, 191 : 291 - 299