United States Department of Agriculture, Wildlife Services, National Wildlife Research Center, Department of Wildland Resources, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, United States of America.
Department of Wildland Resources, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Jun 25;9(6):e100500. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0100500. eCollection 2014.
The relationships between predators, prey, and habitat have long been of interest to applied and basic ecologists. As a native Great Plains mesocarnivore of North America, swift foxes (Vulpes velox) depended on the historic disturbance regime to maintain open grassland habitat. With a decline in native grasslands and subsequent impacts to prairie specialists, notably the swift fox, understanding the influence of habitat on native predators is paramount to future management efforts. From 2001 to 2004, we investigated the influence of vegetation structure on swift fox population ecology (survival and density) on and around the Piñon Canyon Maneuver Site, southeastern Colorado, USA. We monitored 109 foxes on 6 study sites exposed to 3 different disturbance regimes (military training, grazing, unused). On each site we evaluated vegetation structure based on shrub density, basal coverage, vegetation height, and litter. Across all sites, annual fox survival rates ranged from 0.50 to 0.92 for adults and 0.27 to 0.78 for juveniles. Among sites, population estimates ranged from 1 to 7 foxes per 10 km transect. Fox density or survival was not related to the relative abundance of prey. A robust model estimating fox population size and incorporating both shrub density and percent basal cover as explanatory variables far outperformed all other models. Our results supported the idea that, in our region, swift foxes were shortgrass prairie specialists and also indicated a relationship between habitat quality and landscape heterogeneity. We suggest the regulation of swift fox populations may be based on habitat quality through landscape-mediated survival, and managers may effectively use disturbance regimes to create or maintain habitat for this native mesocarnivore.
捕食者、猎物和栖息地之间的关系一直是应用生态学家和基础生态学家感兴趣的话题。作为北美的一种原产大平原中型食肉动物,草原狐(Vulpes velox)依赖于历史上的干扰机制来维持开阔的草原栖息地。随着原生草原的减少以及对草原专家的后续影响,特别是草原狐,了解栖息地对本地捕食者的影响对于未来的管理工作至关重要。从 2001 年到 2004 年,我们在美国科罗拉多州东南部的皮诺峡谷演习场及其周边地区调查了植被结构对草原狐种群生态学(存活率和密度)的影响。我们在 6 个研究地点监测了 109 只狐狸,这些地点暴露在 3 种不同的干扰机制(军事训练、放牧、未使用)下。在每个地点,我们根据灌木密度、基底覆盖率、植被高度和凋落物来评估植被结构。在所有地点,成年狐的年存活率范围为 0.50 到 0.92,幼狐的存活率范围为 0.27 到 0.78。在各地点之间,种群估计值从每 10 公里横截线上的 1 到 7 只狐狸不等。狐密度或存活率与猎物的相对丰度无关。一个估计狐种群规模的稳健模型,将灌木密度和基底覆盖率作为解释变量纳入其中,远远优于所有其他模型。我们的研究结果支持了这样一种观点,即在我们的地区,草原狐是短草草原的专家,并且还表明了栖息地质量和景观异质性之间的关系。我们建议,通过景观介导的存活率来调节草原狐的种群数量,并且管理者可以有效地利用干扰机制来为这种本地中型食肉动物创造或维持栖息地。