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Neonatal Mortality of Elk in Wyoming - Environmental, Population, and Predator Effects (Paperback)
Loot Price: R344
Discovery Miles 3 440
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Neonatal Mortality of Elk in Wyoming - Environmental, Population, and Predator Effects (Paperback)
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Loot Price R344
Discovery Miles 3 440
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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Public concerns over large losses of wild ungulates to predators
arise when restoring large carnivore species to former locations or
population densities. During the 1990s, mountain lion (Felis
concolor) and grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) numbers increased in
Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and gray wolves (Canis lupus) were
reintroduced to the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. We investigated
effects of these predators, as well as black bears (Ursus
americanus) and coyotes (Canis latrans), on mortality of an
abundant and increasing prey species, elk (Cervus elaphus). We
captured, radio-instrumented, and monitored survival of 145 elk
neonates from 3 cohorts during 1990 - 1992, and 153 neonates from 3
cohorts during 1997 - 1999 when grizzly bears and lions were likely
more common than during the earlier period of study. Neonatal
(birth through 31 July) mortality of elk due to predation, disease,
and accidents increased from 15.2 % to 27.5% (P = 0.01).
Sixty-eight percent of all mortality during 1990 - 1992 resulted
from predation by black bears and coyotes, compared to 76% during
1997-1999 by black bears, coyotes, grizzly bears, and mountain
lions, a non-significant difference (P = 0.49). Weight gains of
calves during the first week, but not birth weights, declined from
1990 - 1992 to 1997 - 1999. April temperatures were cooler,
delaying spring green-up, and elk numbers were larger during 1997 -
1999 when weight gains and survival of calves declined. Calves that
died were more likely to be male, below average birth weight, and
had inferior serum nutritional indices. The change in neonatal calf
survival reduced the annual growth rate of the Jackson elk herd
from 1.26 to 1.23, yielding a decline in the annual increment of
approximately 500 animals in a preparturition herd of 11,000 elk.
Changes in mid-summer calf: 100 cow ratios indicated a 39 - 45%
greater decline in neonatal survival than measured among the
radioed calves. We suggest increasing predation during the study
was partially compensatory, given predator selection of inferior
calves and increased mortality of cohorts with reduced first week
growth rates. Reduced rate of first week weight gains of elk calves
extended the duration of neonatal mortality by one month during
1997 - 1999, and may be as important in predisposing calves to
predation and other mortality as low birth weights. Consequently,
we conclude that increased predation was a proximate not an
ultimate cause of declining neonatal survival during the 1990s. We
recommend careful evaluation and hypothesis testing of predator
effects on elk as restoration of large carnivores continues.
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