Hill Jacob E, Boone Hailey M, Gantchoff Mariela G, Kautz Todd M, Kellner Kenneth F, Orning Elizabeth K, Parchizadeh Jamshid, Petroelje Tyler R, Wehr Nathaniel H, Finnegan Shannon P, Fowler Nicholas L, Lutto Ashley L, Schooler Sarah L, van den Bosch Merijn, Zubiria Perez Alejandra, Belant Jerrold L
Global Wildlife Conservation Center State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry Syracuse New York USA.
Savannah River Ecology Laboratory University of Georgia Aiken South Carolina USA.
Ecol Evol. 2022 May 20;12(5):e8875. doi: 10.1002/ece3.8875. eCollection 2022 May.
Understanding the types and magnitude of human-caused mortality is essential for maintaining viable large carnivore populations. We used a database of cause-specific mortality to examine how hunting regulations and landscape configurations influenced human-caused mortality of North American gray wolves (). Our dataset included 21 studies that monitored the fates of 3564 wolves and reported 1442 mortalities. Human-caused mortality accounted for 61% of mortality overall, with 23% due to illegal harvest, 16% due to legal harvest, and 12% the result of management removal. The overall proportion of anthropogenic wolf mortality was lowest in areas with an open hunting season compared to areas with a closed hunting season or mixed hunting regulations, suggesting that harvest mortality was neither fully additive nor compensatory. Proportion of mortality from management removal was reduced in areas with an open hunting season, suggesting that legal harvest may reduce human-wolf conflicts or alternatively that areas with legal harvest have less potential for management removals (e.g., less livestock depredation). Proportion of natural habitat was negatively correlated with the proportion of anthropogenic and illegal harvest mortality. Additionally, the proportion of mortality due to illegal harvest increased with greater natural habitat fragmentation. The observed association between large patches of natural habitat and reductions in several sources of anthropogenic wolf mortality reiterate the importance of habitat preservation to maintain wolf populations. Furthermore, effective management of wolf populations via implementation of harvest may reduce conflict with humans. Effective wolf conservation will depend on holistic strategies that integrate ecological and socioeconomic factors to facilitate their long-term coexistence with humans.
了解人为导致的死亡率的类型和规模对于维持大型食肉动物种群的生存至关重要。我们使用了一个特定死因死亡率数据库,来研究狩猎法规和景观配置如何影响北美灰狼的人为死亡率。我们的数据集包括21项研究,这些研究监测了3564只狼的命运,并报告了1442例死亡情况。人为导致的死亡率占总死亡率的61%,其中23%是非法捕杀造成的,16%是合法捕杀造成的,12%是管理性捕杀的结果。与狩猎季节封闭或狩猎法规混合的地区相比,在有开放狩猎季节的地区,人为造成的狼死亡率总体比例最低,这表明捕杀死亡率既不是完全累加的,也不是补偿性的。在有开放狩猎季节的地区,管理性捕杀导致的死亡率比例有所降低,这表明合法捕杀可能会减少人与狼的冲突,或者说有合法捕杀的地区进行管理性捕杀的可能性较小(例如,家畜被掠食的情况较少)。自然栖息地的比例与人为和非法捕杀死亡率的比例呈负相关。此外,随着自然栖息地破碎化程度的增加,非法捕杀导致的死亡率比例也会上升。大片自然栖息地与多种人为导致的狼死亡率降低之间的关联,再次强调了栖息地保护对于维持狼种群数量的重要性。此外,通过实施捕杀来有效管理狼种群可能会减少与人类的冲突。有效的狼保护将取决于整合生态和社会经济因素以促进它们与人类长期共存的整体策略。