Dickie Melanie, Sherman Geoff G, Sutherland Glenn D, McNay Robert S, Cody Michael
Caribou Monitoring Unit, Alberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Woodlands North, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Conserv Biol. 2023 Apr;37(2):e14004. doi: 10.1111/cobi.14004. Epub 2023 Jan 25.
Fragmentation of the boreal forest by linear features, including seismic lines, has destabilized predator-prey dynamics, resulting in the decline of woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) populations. Restoration of human-altered habitat has therefore been identified as a critical management tool for achieving self-sustaining woodland caribou populations. However, only recently has testing of the response of caribou and other wildlife to restoration activities been conducted. Early work has centered around assessing changes in wildlife use of restored seismic lines. We evaluated whether restoration reduces the movement rates of predators and their associated prey, which is expected to decrease predator hunting efficiency and ultimately reduce caribou mortality. We developed a new method for using cameras to measure fine-scale movement by measuring speed as animals traveled between cameras in an array. We used our method to quantify speed of caribou, moose (Alces alces), bears (Ursus americanus), and wolves (Canis lupus) on treated (restored) and untreated seismic lines. Restoration treatments reduced travel speeds along seismic lines of wolves by 1.38 km/h, bears by 0.55 km/h, and caribou by 1.57 km/h, but did not reduce moose travel speeds. Reduced predator and caribou speeds on treated seismic lines are predicted to decrease encounter rates between predators and caribou and thus lower caribou kill rates. However, further work is needed to determine whether reduced movement rates result in reduced encounter rates with prey, and ultimately reduced caribou mortality.
包括地震勘探线在内的线性特征对北方森林造成的碎片化,已经破坏了捕食者与猎物之间的动态关系,导致林地驯鹿(Rangifer tarandus caribou)种群数量下降。因此,恢复受人类改变的栖息地已被确定为实现林地驯鹿种群自我维持的关键管理工具。然而,直到最近才开始对驯鹿和其他野生动物对恢复活动的反应进行测试。早期工作主要围绕评估野生动物对恢复后的地震勘探线的利用变化。我们评估了恢复措施是否能降低捕食者及其相关猎物的移动速度,这有望降低捕食者的捕猎效率并最终降低驯鹿的死亡率。我们开发了一种新方法,通过测量动物在一系列相机之间移动时的速度,利用相机来测量精细尺度的移动。我们使用我们的方法来量化驯鹿、驼鹿(Alces alces)、熊(Ursus americanus)和狼(Canis lupus)在经过处理(恢复)和未处理的地震勘探线上的速度。恢复处理使狼在地震勘探线上的行进速度降低了1.38千米/小时,熊降低了0.55千米/小时,驯鹿降低了1.57千米/小时,但没有降低驼鹿的行进速度。预计处理后的地震勘探线上捕食者和驯鹿速度的降低将减少捕食者与驯鹿之间的相遇率,从而降低驯鹿的死亡率。然而,还需要进一步的工作来确定移动速度的降低是否会导致与猎物的相遇率降低,并最终降低驯鹿的死亡率。