Tattersall Erin R, Burgar Joanna M, Fisher Jason T, Burton A Cole
Department of Forest Resources Management University of British Columbia Vancouver Canada.
School of Environmental Studies University of Victoria Victoria Canada.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Jan 30;10(3):1678-1691. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6028. eCollection 2020 Feb.
Interspecific interactions are an integral aspect of ecosystem functioning that may be disrupted in an increasingly anthropocentric world. Industrial landscape change creates a novel playing field on which these interactions take place, and a key question for wildlife managers is whether and how species are able to coexist in such working landscapes. Using camera traps deployed in northern Alberta, we surveyed boreal predators to determine whether interspecific interactions affected occurrences of black bears (), coyotes (), and lynx () within a landscape disturbed by networks of seismic lines (corridors cut for seismic exploration of oil and gas reserves). We tested hypotheses of species interactions across one spatial-only and two spatiotemporal (daily and weekly) scales. Specifically, we hypothesized that (1) predators avoid competition with the apex predator, gray wolf (), (2) they avoid competition with each other as intraguild competitors, and (3) they overlap with their prey. All three predators overlapped with wolves on at least one scale, although models at the daily and weekly scale had substantial unexplained variance. None of the predators showed avoidance of intraguild competitors or overlap with prey. These results show patterns in predator space use that are consistent with both facilitative interactions or shared responses to unmeasured ecological cues. Our study provides insight into how predator species use the working boreal landscape in relation to each other, and highlights that predator management may indirectly influence multiple species through their interactions.
种间相互作用是生态系统功能的一个不可或缺的方面,在一个日益以人类为中心的世界中,这种相互作用可能会受到干扰。工业景观变化创造了一个新的活动场所,这些相互作用在这个场所中发生,对于野生动物管理者来说,一个关键问题是物种是否以及如何能够在这样的工作景观中共存。我们在阿尔伯塔省北部部署了相机陷阱,对北方的食肉动物进行了调查,以确定种间相互作用是否会影响在因地震勘探线网络(为石油和天然气储备地震勘探而切割的走廊)而受到干扰的景观中黑熊、郊狼和猞猁的出现情况。我们在一个仅空间尺度以及两个时空尺度(每日和每周)上测试了物种相互作用的假设。具体而言,我们假设:(1)食肉动物避免与顶级食肉动物灰狼竞争;(2)它们作为同资源种团竞争者避免相互竞争;(3)它们与猎物存在重叠。尽管在每日和每周尺度上的模型有很大一部分无法解释的方差,但所有这三种食肉动物在至少一个尺度上与狼存在重叠。没有一种食肉动物表现出对同资源种团竞争者的回避或与猎物的重叠。这些结果显示了食肉动物空间利用的模式,这与促进性相互作用或对未测量生态线索的共同反应是一致的。我们的研究深入了解了食肉动物物种如何相互关联地利用北方工作景观,并强调食肉动物管理可能会通过它们的相互作用间接影响多个物种。