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Behavioural strategies towards human disturbances explain individual performance in woodland caribou

Leclerc Martin, Dussault Christian et St-Laurent Martin-Hugues. (2014). Behavioural strategies towards human disturbances explain individual performance in woodland caribou. Oecologia, 176, (1), p. 297-306.

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URL officielle: http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1007/s00442-014-3012-9

Résumé

Behavioural strategies may have important fitness, ecological and evolutionary consequences. In woodland caribou, human disturbances are associated with higher predation risk. Between 2004 and 2011, we investigated if habitat selection strategies of female caribou towards disturbances influenced their calf’s survival in managed boreal forest with varying intensities of human disturbances. Calf survival was 53 % and 43 % after 30 and 90 days following birth, respectively, and 52 % of calves that died were killed by black bear. The probability that a female lose its calf to predation was not influenced by habitat composition of her annual home range, but decreased with an increase in proportion of open lichen woodland within her calving home range. At the local scale, females that did not lose their calf displayed stronger avoidance of high road density areas than females that lost their calf to predation. Further, females that lost their calf to predation and that had a low proportion of ≤5-year-old cutovers within their calving home range were mostly observed in areas where these young cutovers were locally absent. Also, females that lost their calf to predation and that had a high proportion of ≤5-year-old cutovers within their calving home range were mostly observed in areas with a high local density of ≤5-year-old cutovers. Our study demonstrates that we have to account for human-induced disturbances at both local and regional scales in order to further enhance effective caribou management plans. We demonstrate that disturbances not only impact spatial distribution of individuals, but also their reproductive success.

Type de document:Article publié dans une revue avec comité d'évaluation
ISSN:0029-8549
Volume:176
Numéro:1
Pages:p. 297-306
Version évaluée par les pairs:Oui
Date:18 Septembre 2014
Nombre de pages:10
Identifiant unique:10.1007/s00442-014-3012-9
Sujets:Sciences naturelles et génie > Sciences naturelles > Biologie et autres sciences connexes
Département, module, service et unité de recherche:Départements et modules > Département des sciences fondamentales
Unités de recherche > Centre de recherche sur la Boréalie (CREB)
Mots-clés:anthropogenic disturbances, calf survival, functional response, habitat selection, reproductive success
Déposé le:27 oct. 2023 14:33
Dernière modification:27 oct. 2023 14:33
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