Boreal predator co-occurrences reveal shared use of seismic lines in a working landscape

AbstractInterspecific interactions are an integral aspect of ecosystem functioning that may be disrupted in an increasingly anthropocentric world. Industrial landscape change creates a novel playing field on which these interactions take place, and a key question for wildlife managers is whether and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tattersall, Erin R., Burgar, Joanna M., Fisher, Jason T., Burton, A. Cole
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:5cccda915ba203668bba0e46238ef6cebf8b35ffc9e6be4f8afb0953a993f241
id dataone:sha256:5cccda915ba203668bba0e46238ef6cebf8b35ffc9e6be4f8afb0953a993f241
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:sha256:5cccda915ba203668bba0e46238ef6cebf8b35ffc9e6be4f8afb0953a993f241 2024-06-03T18:46:47+00:00 Boreal predator co-occurrences reveal shared use of seismic lines in a working landscape Tattersall, Erin R. Burgar, Joanna M. Fisher, Jason T. Burton, A. Cole 2021-05-19T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:5cccda915ba203668bba0e46238ef6cebf8b35ffc9e6be4f8afb0953a993f241 unknown Canis latrans Multi-species monitoring Lynx canadensis Ursus americanus Camera trap surveys Other wildlife conservation Canis lupus human disturbance Dataset 2021 dataone:urn:node:BOREALIS 2024-06-03T18:17:48Z AbstractInterspecific interactions are an integral aspect of ecosystem functioning that may be disrupted in an increasingly anthropocentric world. Industrial landscape change creates a novel playing field on which these interactions take place, and a key question for wildlife managers is whether and how species are able to coexist in such working landscapes. Using camera traps deployed in northern Alberta, we surveyed boreal predators to determine whether interspecific interactions affected occurrences of black bears (Ursus americanus), coyotes (Canis latrans), and lynx (Lynx canadensis) within a landscape disturbed by networks of seismic lines (corridors cut for seismic exploration of oil and gas reserves). We tested hypotheses of species interactions across one spatial-only and two spatiotemporal (daily and weekly) scales. Specifically, we hypothesized that 1) predators avoid competition with the apex predator, grey wolf (Canis lupus), 2) they avoid competition with each other as intraguild competitors, and 3) they overlap with their prey. All three predators overlapped with wolves on at least one scale, although models at the daily and weekly scale had substantial unexplained variance. None of the predators showed avoidance of intraguild competitors or overlap with prey. These results show patterns in predator space use that are consistent with both facilitative interactions or shared responses to unmeasured ecological cues. Our study provides insight into how industrial linear features affect the use of boreal landscapes by multiple predator species, and highlights that predator management may indirectly influence multiple species through interactions. Dataset Canis lupus Lynx Unknown
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:BOREALIS
language unknown
topic Canis latrans
Multi-species monitoring
Lynx canadensis
Ursus americanus
Camera trap surveys
Other
wildlife conservation
Canis lupus
human disturbance
spellingShingle Canis latrans
Multi-species monitoring
Lynx canadensis
Ursus americanus
Camera trap surveys
Other
wildlife conservation
Canis lupus
human disturbance
Tattersall, Erin R.
Burgar, Joanna M.
Fisher, Jason T.
Burton, A. Cole
Boreal predator co-occurrences reveal shared use of seismic lines in a working landscape
topic_facet Canis latrans
Multi-species monitoring
Lynx canadensis
Ursus americanus
Camera trap surveys
Other
wildlife conservation
Canis lupus
human disturbance
description AbstractInterspecific interactions are an integral aspect of ecosystem functioning that may be disrupted in an increasingly anthropocentric world. Industrial landscape change creates a novel playing field on which these interactions take place, and a key question for wildlife managers is whether and how species are able to coexist in such working landscapes. Using camera traps deployed in northern Alberta, we surveyed boreal predators to determine whether interspecific interactions affected occurrences of black bears (Ursus americanus), coyotes (Canis latrans), and lynx (Lynx canadensis) within a landscape disturbed by networks of seismic lines (corridors cut for seismic exploration of oil and gas reserves). We tested hypotheses of species interactions across one spatial-only and two spatiotemporal (daily and weekly) scales. Specifically, we hypothesized that 1) predators avoid competition with the apex predator, grey wolf (Canis lupus), 2) they avoid competition with each other as intraguild competitors, and 3) they overlap with their prey. All three predators overlapped with wolves on at least one scale, although models at the daily and weekly scale had substantial unexplained variance. None of the predators showed avoidance of intraguild competitors or overlap with prey. These results show patterns in predator space use that are consistent with both facilitative interactions or shared responses to unmeasured ecological cues. Our study provides insight into how industrial linear features affect the use of boreal landscapes by multiple predator species, and highlights that predator management may indirectly influence multiple species through interactions.
format Dataset
author Tattersall, Erin R.
Burgar, Joanna M.
Fisher, Jason T.
Burton, A. Cole
author_facet Tattersall, Erin R.
Burgar, Joanna M.
Fisher, Jason T.
Burton, A. Cole
author_sort Tattersall, Erin R.
title Boreal predator co-occurrences reveal shared use of seismic lines in a working landscape
title_short Boreal predator co-occurrences reveal shared use of seismic lines in a working landscape
title_full Boreal predator co-occurrences reveal shared use of seismic lines in a working landscape
title_fullStr Boreal predator co-occurrences reveal shared use of seismic lines in a working landscape
title_full_unstemmed Boreal predator co-occurrences reveal shared use of seismic lines in a working landscape
title_sort boreal predator co-occurrences reveal shared use of seismic lines in a working landscape
publishDate 2021
url https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:5cccda915ba203668bba0e46238ef6cebf8b35ffc9e6be4f8afb0953a993f241
genre Canis lupus
Lynx
genre_facet Canis lupus
Lynx
_version_ 1800871179072831488