Bergman Eric J, Doherty Paul F, Bishop Chad J, Wolfe Lisa L, Banulis Bradley A
Mammals Research, Colorado Parks and Wildlife, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States of America.
Department of Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Sep 3;9(9):e106374. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0106374. eCollection 2014.
The relationships between habitat, body condition, life history characteristics, and fitness components of ungulates are interwoven and of interest to researchers as they strive to understand the impacts of a changing environment. With the increased availability of portable ultrasound machines and the refinement of hormonal assays, assessment of ungulate body condition has become an accessible monitoring strategy. We employed body condition scoring, estimation of % ingesta-free body fat (%IFBF), assessment of free thyroid hormones (FT4 and FT3), and assessment of pregnancy, as metrics to determine if landscape-level habitat treatments affected body condition of adult (≥ 1.5 years old) female mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus). All body condition related metrics were measured on 2 neighboring study areas--a reference area that had received no habitat treatments and a treatment study area that had received mechanical removal of pinyon pine (Pinyus edulis)--Utah juniper (Juniperus osteosperma) forest, chemical control of weeds, and reseeding with preferred mule deer browse species. A consistent trend of higher %IFBF was observed in the treatment study area [Formula: see text] than in the reference study area [Formula: see text], although variation of estimates was larger than hypothesized. A similar pattern was observed with higher thyroid hormones concentrations being observed in the treatment study area, but large amounts of variation within concentration estimates were also observed. The consistent pattern of higher body condition related estimates in our treatment study area provides evidence that large mammalian species are sensitive to landscape change, although variation within estimates underlie the challenge in detecting population level impacts stemming from environmental change.
有蹄类动物的栖息地、身体状况、生活史特征和健康组成部分之间的关系相互交织,研究人员在努力理解不断变化的环境的影响时对其很感兴趣。随着便携式超声机器的可用性增加以及激素检测方法的改进,评估有蹄类动物的身体状况已成为一种可行的监测策略。我们采用身体状况评分、无食糜体脂百分比(%IFBF)估计、游离甲状腺激素(FT4和FT3)评估以及妊娠评估作为指标,以确定景观水平的栖息地处理是否会影响成年(≥1.5岁)雌性骡鹿(Odocoileus hemionus)的身体状况。所有与身体状况相关的指标都在两个相邻的研究区域进行了测量——一个未接受栖息地处理的参考区域和一个接受了去除矮松(Pinus edulis)——犹他桧(Juniperus osteosperma)森林、化学除草以及用骡鹿偏好的 browse 物种重新播种等处理的研究区域。在处理研究区域观察到%IFBF较高的一致趋势[公式:见正文],高于参考研究区域[公式:见正文],尽管估计值的变化比假设的要大。在处理研究区域观察到甲状腺激素浓度较高的类似模式,但在浓度估计值内也观察到大量变化。我们的处理研究区域中与身体状况相关的估计值较高的一致模式提供了证据,表明大型哺乳动物物种对景观变化敏感,尽管估计值内的变化构成了检测环境变化对种群水平影响的挑战。