Density‑dependent winter survival of immatures in an irruptive raptor with pulsed breeding

Highly mobile predators can show strong numerical responses to pulsed resources, sometimes resulting in irruptions where large numbers of young invade landscapes at a continental scale. High production of young in irruption years may have a strong influence on the population dynamics unless immature...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Oecologia
Main Authors: McCabe, Rebecca A., Therrien, Jean‑François, Wiebe, Karen, Gauthier, Gilles, Brinker, David, Weidensaul, Scott, Reid, Donald, Doyle, Frank I., Jacobsen, Karl-Otto, Aarvak, Tomas, Øien, Ingar Jostein, Solheim, Roar, Fitzgerald, Guy, Smith, Norman, Bates, Kirk, Fuller, Mark, Miller, Erica, Elliott, Kyle H.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2986360
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-021-05057-9
Description
Summary:Highly mobile predators can show strong numerical responses to pulsed resources, sometimes resulting in irruptions where large numbers of young invade landscapes at a continental scale. High production of young in irruption years may have a strong influence on the population dynamics unless immature survival is reduced compared to non-irruption years. This could occur if subordinate individuals (mainly immatures) are forced into suboptimal habitats due to density-dependent effects in irruption years. To test whether irruptive individuals had lower survival than non-irruptive ones, we combined necropsy results (N = 365) with telemetry (N = 185) from more than 20 years to record timing and causes of mortality in snowy owls (Bubo scandiacus), which irrupt into eastern North America during winter following high breeding output caused by lemming peaks in the Arctic. Mortality was more than four times higher in irruption years than non-irruption years, but only for immatures, and occurred disproportionately in early winter for immatures, but not adults. Mortality was also higher in eastern North America, where owl abundance fluctuates considerably between years, compared to core winter regions of the Arctic and Prairies where populations are more stable. Most mortality was not due to starvation, but rather associated with human activity, especially vehicle collisions. We conclude that immature snowy owls that irrupt into eastern North America are limited by density-dependent factors, such as increased competition forcing individuals to occupy risky human-altered habitats. For highly mobile, irruptive animals, resource pulses may have a limited impact on population dynamics due to low subsequent survival of breeding output during the nonbreeding season. publishedVersion