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Extreme droughts shrink suitable habitats and reduce fitness for large mammals in the American West

Leclerc Martin, Mills Kirby L., Ditmer Mark A., Stoner David C., Sexton Joseph O., Wang Panshi, Hersey Kent R., Schroeder Cody A., Andreasen Alyson M., Choate David, Hall Derek B., Longshore Kathleen M., DeBloois Darren, Engebretsen Kristin, Young Julie K., Jackson Patrick J., Schoenecker Kathryn A. et Carter Neil H.. (2026). Extreme droughts shrink suitable habitats and reduce fitness for large mammals in the American West. Communications Earth & Environment, 7, (450), p. 1-10.

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URL officielle: https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-026-03530-y

Résumé

Droughts are intensifying across the biosphere, yet the consequences of this phenomenon for wildlife habitat suitability and fitness are poorly studied. We analyzed 12 years of GPS telemetry data for three large mammal species—herbivorous mule deer ( N = 2854), omnivorous black bears ( N = 103), and carnivorous cougars ( N = 105)—to evaluate the effects of drought on each species’ habitat selection across a 500,000-km 2 aridity gradient in the interior West, USA. Additionally, we evaluated interannual variation in mule deer reproduction as a function of drought intensity. Severe drought reduced the area of highly selected habitat by 10.0% for mule deer, 14.3% for black bears, and 18.2% for cougars, suggesting stronger negative effects of drought at upper trophic levels. We also found that mule deer fawn recruitment decreased by >34% under extreme drought conditions. Our findings highlight the critical influence of drought on habitat selection of large mammals and common indices of mule deer fitness. Furthermore, we underscore the need for integrating predictions of climate-driven environmental changes into wildlife conservation planning.

Type de document:Article publié dans une revue avec comité d'évaluation
ISSN:2662-4435
Volume:7
Numéro:450
Pages:p. 1-10
Version évaluée par les pairs:Oui
Date:25 Mai 2026
Identifiant unique:10.1038/s43247-026-03530-y
Unité(s) institutionnelle(s):Unités de recherche ou de recherche-création > Centre de recherche sur la Boréalie (CREB)
Départements et unités pédagogiques > Département des sciences fondamentales
Mots-clés:Drought, habitat selection, large mammals, Odocoileus hemionus, Ursus americanus, Puma concolor
Déposé le:22 juin 2026 15:30
Dernière modification:22 juin 2026 15:30
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