Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center, US Geological Survey, Jamestown, North Dakota, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011;6(10):e25328. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0025328. Epub 2011 Oct 4.
Information about wolf (Canis lupus) movements anywhere near the northern extreme of the species' range in the High Arctic (>75°N latitude) are lacking. There, wolves prey primarily on muskoxen (Ovibos moschatus) and must survive 4 months of 24 hr/day winter darkness and temperatures reaching -53 C. The extent to which wolves remain active and prey on muskoxen during the dark period are unknown, for the closest area where information is available about winter wolf movements is >2,250 km south. We studied a pack of ≥20 wolves on Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada (80°N latitude) from July 2009 through mid-April 2010 by collaring a lead wolf with a Global Positioning System (GPS)/Argos radio collar. The collar recorded the wolf's precise locations at 6:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. daily and transmitted the locations by satellite to our email. Straight-line distances between consecutive 12-hr locations varied between 0 and 76 km. Mean (SE) linear distance between consecutive locations (n = 554) was 11 (0.5) km. Total minimum distance traveled was 5,979 km, and total area covered was 6,640 km(2), the largest wolf range reported. The wolf and presumably his pack once made a 263-km (straight-line distance) foray to the southeast during 19-28 January 2010, returning 29 January to 1 February at an average of 41 km/day straight-line distances between 12-hr locations. This study produced the first detailed movement information about any large mammal in the High Arctic, and the average movements during the dark period did not differ from those afterwards. Wolf movements during the dark period in the highest latitudes match those of the other seasons and generally those of wolves in lower latitudes, and, at least with the gross movements measurable by our methods, the 4-month period without direct sunlight produced little change in movements.
有关狼(Canis lupus)在北极地区(纬度超过 75°N)的最北极端附近活动的信息很少。在那里,狼主要捕食麝香牛(Ovibos moschatus),并且必须在 24 小时每天的冬季黑暗和达到-53°C 的温度下生存 4 个月。在黑暗期间,狼保持活跃并捕食麝香牛的程度尚不清楚,因为获得有关冬季狼活动的最接近的信息的地区在南部超过 2,250 公里。我们通过在 2009 年 7 月至 2010 年 4 月中旬在加拿大努纳武特埃尔斯米尔岛(80°N 纬度)对一个至少有 20 只狼的狼群进行了研究,通过在领头狼上佩戴 GPS/Argos 无线电项圈。项圈每天早上 6 点和晚上 6 点记录狼的精确位置,并通过卫星将位置传输到我们的电子邮件中。连续 12 小时位置之间的直线距离在 0 到 76 公里之间变化。连续位置(n=554)之间的平均(SE)线性距离为 11(0.5)公里。总行程最短为 5979 公里,总覆盖面积为 6640 公里(2),这是报道的最大狼范围。狼和大概他的狼群在 2010 年 1 月 19 日至 28 日期间曾东南方向进行了 263 公里(直线距离)的突袭,于 1 月 29 日至 2 月 1 日返回,平均每天直线距离 41 公里。这项研究首次提供了有关北极地区任何大型哺乳动物的详细运动信息,并且在黑暗期间的平均运动与之后的运动没有区别。在最高纬度的黑暗期间的狼的运动与其他季节的运动以及与较低纬度的狼的运动基本匹配,并且至少在我们的方法可测量的总运动方面,没有直接阳光的 4 个月期间几乎没有改变运动。