Sharpe PB
Department of Biology Colorado State University Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA
Environ Manage. 1998 Jul;22(4):617-23. doi: 10.1007/s002679900133.
/ Maintaining raptor populations is a primary objective of the legislation that designates the Snake River Birds of Prey National Conservation Area. Army training activities could influence habitat quality for raptors by changing the density, productivity, or behavior of their Townsend's ground squirrel (Spermophilus townsendii) prey. These changes could occur directly or as a result of changes in the vegetation available as food and cover for the ground squirrels. We assessed the effects of long-term tracking by armored vehicles by comparing 9-ha areas in sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata) -dominated shrubsteppe and bluegrass (Poa secunda) -dominated grasslands subjected to low-intensity tracking for approximately 50 years with others that had not been tracked. We did not detect any effect on ground squirrel population dynamics associated with long-term tracking. Although densities of adults and juveniles tended to be higher in the areas exposed to such tracking, we attribute this difference to other factors that varied spatially. To determine short-term (two-year) effects, we experimentally tracked two sagebrush and two grassland sites with an M-1 tank after animals had begun their inactive season. In the following two active seasons we monitored squirrel demography and behavior and vegetative characteristics on the experimentally tracked sites and compared the results with control sites. Although we experimentally tracked approximately 33% of the surface of each of four sites where ground squirrel densities were assessed, the tracking had a detectable effect only on some herbaceous perennials and did not influence ground squirrel densities or behavior significantly during the subsequent two active seasons. We conclude that tracking after the start of the inactive season is likely to influence ground squirrel demography or behavior only if vegetation cover is substantially changed by decreasing coverage of preferred food plants or increasing the coverage of annual grasses and forbs that are succulent for only a short time each year.KEY WORDS: Armored vehicle tracking; Ground squirrels; Spermophilus townsendii; Behavior; Vegetation; Population density effects
维持猛禽数量是指定斯内克河猛禽国家保护区的立法的首要目标。陆军训练活动可能会通过改变猛禽的汤森氏地松鼠(Spermophilus townsendii)猎物的密度、繁殖力或行为,来影响猛禽的栖息地质量。这些变化可能直接发生,也可能是由于作为地松鼠食物和掩护的植被变化所导致的。我们通过比较在以三齿蒿(Artemisia tridentata)为主的灌丛草原和以早熟禾(Poa secunda)为主的草原中,经历了约50年低强度履带行驶的9公顷区域与未经历履带行驶的区域,评估了装甲车辆长期履带行驶的影响。我们没有发现与长期履带行驶相关的对地松鼠种群动态的任何影响。尽管在经历此类履带行驶的区域,成年和幼年地松鼠的密度往往较高,但我们将这种差异归因于空间上变化的其他因素。为了确定短期(两年)影响,我们在动物进入非活跃季节后,用一辆M - 1坦克对两个蒿属植物区域和两个草原区域进行了实验性履带行驶。在接下来的两个活跃季节,我们监测了实验履带行驶区域的地松鼠种群统计学、行为和植被特征,并将结果与对照区域进行比较。尽管我们对四个评估了地松鼠密度的区域中的每个区域约33%的表面进行了实验性履带行驶,但履带行驶仅对一些多年生草本植物有可检测到的影响,并且在随后的两个活跃季节中对 地松鼠密度或行为没有显著影响。我们得出结论,在非活跃季节开始后进行履带行驶,只有在植被覆盖因减少首选食物植物的覆盖或增加每年仅短时间多汁的一年生禾本科植物和杂草的覆盖而大幅改变时,才可能影响地松鼠种群统计学或行为。关键词:装甲车辆履带行驶;地松鼠;汤森氏地松鼠;行为;植被;种群密度影响