Western Ecosystems Technology, Inc., Laramie, WY, USA.
Haub School of Environment and Natural Resources, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2017 Nov;23(11):4521-4529. doi: 10.1111/gcb.13711. Epub 2017 May 10.
As the extent and intensity of energy development in North America increases, so do disturbances to wildlife and the habitats they rely upon. Impacts to mule deer are of particular concern because some of the largest gas fields in the USA overlap critical winter ranges. Short-term studies of 2-3 years have shown that mule deer and other ungulates avoid energy infrastructure; however, there remains a common perception that ungulates habituate to energy development, and thus, the potential for a demographic effect is low. We used telemetry data from 187 individual deer across a 17-year period, including 2 years predevelopment and 15 years during development, to determine whether mule deer habituated to natural gas development and if their response to disturbance varied with winter severity. Concurrently, we measured abundance of mule deer to indirectly link behavior with demography. Mule deer consistently avoided energy infrastructure through the 15-year period of development and used habitats that were an average of 913 m further from well pads compared with predevelopment patterns of habitat use. Even during the last 3 years of study, when most wells were in production and reclamation efforts underway, mule deer remained >1 km away from well pads. The magnitude of avoidance behavior, however, was mediated by winter severity, where aversion to well pads decreased as winter severity increased. Mule deer abundance declined by 36% during the development period, despite aggressive onsite mitigation efforts (e.g. directional drilling and liquid gathering systems) and a 45% reduction in deer harvest. Our results indicate behavioral effects of energy development on mule deer are long term and may affect population abundance by displacing animals and thereby functionally reducing the amount of available habitat.
随着北美能源开发的范围和强度的增加,野生动物及其赖以生存的栖息地也受到了越来越多的干扰。对骡鹿的影响尤其令人关注,因为美国一些最大的气田与关键的冬季觅食地重叠。为期 2-3 年的短期研究表明,骡鹿和其他有蹄类动物会避开能源基础设施;然而,人们普遍认为有蹄类动物会逐渐适应能源开发,因此,潜在的种群效应较低。我们使用了 17 年间从 187 只鹿身上获得的遥测数据,包括开发前的 2 年和开发期间的 15 年,以确定骡鹿是否对天然气开发产生了适应性,以及它们对干扰的反应是否随冬季的严重程度而变化。同时,我们还测量了骡鹿的数量,以将行为与种群动态间接联系起来。在 15 年的开发期间,骡鹿一直避开能源基础设施,与开发前的栖息地使用模式相比,它们使用的栖息地平均距离井场 913 米。即使在研究的最后 3 年,当大多数油井已经投入生产,且正在进行复垦工作时,骡鹿仍远离油井。然而,这种回避行为的程度受到冬季严重程度的影响,即随着冬季严重程度的增加,对油井的厌恶程度降低。尽管在开发期间采取了积极的现场缓解措施(如定向钻井和液体收集系统),并减少了 45%的鹿猎捕量,但骡鹿的数量仍下降了 36%。我们的研究结果表明,能源开发对骡鹿的行为影响是长期的,可能会通过驱赶动物从而实际减少可用栖息地的数量,从而对种群数量产生影响。