Large Carnivore Conservation Lab, School of the Environment, Washington State University Pullman, Washington, 99164.
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife 600 Capitol Way North, Olympia, Washington, 98501.
Ecol Evol. 2014 Jun;4(11):2178-85. doi: 10.1002/ece3.1089. Epub 2014 May 5.
The effects of increased mortality on the spatial dynamics of solitary carnivores are not well understood. We examined the spatial ecology of two cougar populations that differed in hunting intensity to test whether increased mortality affected home range size and overlap. The stability hypothesis predicts that home range size and overlap will be similar for both sexes among the two areas. The instability hypothesis predicts that home range size and overlap will be greater in the heavily hunted population, although may differ for males versus females due to behavior strategies. We marked 22 adult resident cougars in the lightly hunted population and 20 in the heavily hunted population with GPS collars from 2002 to 2008. Cougar densities and predation rates were similar among areas, suggesting no difference in per capita resources. We compared home range size, two-dimensional home range overlap, and three-dimensional utilization distribution overlap index (UDOI) among annual home ranges for male and female cougars. Male cougars in the heavily hunted area had larger sized home ranges and greater two-dimensional and three-dimensional UDOI overlap than those in the lightly hunted area. Females showed no difference in size and overlap of home range areas between study populations - further suggesting that differences in prey quantity and distribution between study areas did not explain differences in male spatial organization. We reject the spatial stability hypothesis and provide evidence to support the spatial instability hypothesis. Increased hunting and ensuing increased male home range size and overlap may result in negative demographic effects for cougars and potential unintended consequences for managers.
高死亡率对独居食肉动物空间动态的影响尚未得到很好的理解。我们研究了两个美洲狮种群的空间生态学,它们在狩猎强度上存在差异,以检验死亡率的增加是否会影响其活动范围大小和重叠度。稳定假说预测,在这两个区域中,雄性和雌性的活动范围大小和重叠度应该相似。不稳定假说预测,在高狩猎强度的区域中,活动范围大小和重叠度会更大,尽管由于行为策略的不同,雄性和雌性之间可能会有所不同。我们在 2002 年至 2008 年间,用 GPS 项圈标记了 22 只生活在低狩猎强度地区的成年雄性和 20 只生活在高狩猎强度地区的成年雌性美洲狮。两个地区的美洲狮密度和捕食率相似,表明人均资源没有差异。我们比较了雄性和雌性美洲狮的年度活动范围之间的活动范围大小、二维重叠度和三维利用分布重叠指数(UDOI)。高狩猎强度地区的雄性美洲狮的活动范围较大,二维和三维 UDOI 重叠度也高于低狩猎强度地区的雄性美洲狮。雌性在两个研究区域之间的活动范围大小和重叠度方面没有差异-这进一步表明,研究区域之间猎物数量和分布的差异并不能解释雄性空间组织的差异。我们拒绝空间稳定假说,并提供证据支持空间不稳定假说。高狩猎和随之而来的雄性活动范围大小和重叠度的增加可能会对美洲狮产生负面影响,并对管理者产生潜在的意外后果。