Recreation, Fire and Disease Create a Mosaic of Threats for Golden Eagles in Southwestern Idaho

Anthropogenic stressors have resulted in ecosystem impoverishment and biodiversity loss worldwide. As the strength and reach of the human footprint increases, investigation of the additive or interactive effects of synergistic stressors on the landscape is imperative for conserving ecosystems and sp...

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Main Author: Davis, Caitlin Marie
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1590
https://doi.org/10.18122/td/1590/boisestate
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/2714/viewcontent/Davis_Caitlin_thesis_August_2019.pdf
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spelling ftboisestateu:oai:scholarworks.boisestate.edu:td-2714 2023-10-29T02:40:47+01:00 Recreation, Fire and Disease Create a Mosaic of Threats for Golden Eagles in Southwestern Idaho Davis, Caitlin Marie 2019-08-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1590 https://doi.org/10.18122/td/1590/boisestate https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/2714/viewcontent/Davis_Caitlin_thesis_August_2019.pdf unknown ScholarWorks https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1590 doi:10.18122/td/1590/boisestate https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/2714/viewcontent/Davis_Caitlin_thesis_August_2019.pdf Boise State University Theses and Dissertations disturbance recreation wildfire eagle reproduction diet Ecology and Evolutionary Biology text 2019 ftboisestateu https://doi.org/10.18122/td/1590/boisestate 2023-09-29T15:19:33Z Anthropogenic stressors have resulted in ecosystem impoverishment and biodiversity loss worldwide. As the strength and reach of the human footprint increases, investigation of the additive or interactive effects of synergistic stressors on the landscape is imperative for conserving ecosystems and species within them. Apex predators can reflect how stressors impact ecosystems because of bottom-up effects. Golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos) are apex predators of North American sagebrush-steppe ecosystems that are impacted by a suite of stressors, including wildfire, outdoor recreation disturbance, and habitat loss. We investigated whether multiple threats had additive or interactive effects on golden eagle occupancy, reproduction, and diet. We used a beforeafter-control-impact (BACI) design to study the effects of fire and recreation on eagle reproduction at 22 historical territories in southwestern Idaho. In 2015, the Soda wildfire burned 14 historical eagle territories, and 8 territories were unburned. We collected data on recreation and eagle territory occupancy, confirmed egg-laying rates, young fledged per egg-laying pair, and diet in 2017 and 2018 and compared these data to pre-fire levels of recreation and eagle reproduction in 2013 and 2014. Off-road vehicle (ORV) use, as well as total use, increased in unburned areas after the fire and remained the same in burned areas. ORV use was negatively associated with eagle territory occupancy, regardless of whether the time period was before or after the fire, or whether an area had burned. Conversely, early season pedestrian use decreased in burned areas after the fire and the effect of early season pedestrian use depended on fire. Before the Soda fire, pedestrian use was negatively associated with the rate of confirmed egg-laying. In burned territories after the Soda fire, pedestrian use decreased and the rate of confirmed egglaying increased, suggesting that the decrease in pedestrian use had an interactive, positive effect on eagle reproduction. Diet ... Text Aquila chrysaetos golden eagle Boise State University: Scholar Works
institution Open Polar
collection Boise State University: Scholar Works
op_collection_id ftboisestateu
language unknown
topic disturbance
recreation
wildfire
eagle
reproduction
diet
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
spellingShingle disturbance
recreation
wildfire
eagle
reproduction
diet
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Davis, Caitlin Marie
Recreation, Fire and Disease Create a Mosaic of Threats for Golden Eagles in Southwestern Idaho
topic_facet disturbance
recreation
wildfire
eagle
reproduction
diet
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
description Anthropogenic stressors have resulted in ecosystem impoverishment and biodiversity loss worldwide. As the strength and reach of the human footprint increases, investigation of the additive or interactive effects of synergistic stressors on the landscape is imperative for conserving ecosystems and species within them. Apex predators can reflect how stressors impact ecosystems because of bottom-up effects. Golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos) are apex predators of North American sagebrush-steppe ecosystems that are impacted by a suite of stressors, including wildfire, outdoor recreation disturbance, and habitat loss. We investigated whether multiple threats had additive or interactive effects on golden eagle occupancy, reproduction, and diet. We used a beforeafter-control-impact (BACI) design to study the effects of fire and recreation on eagle reproduction at 22 historical territories in southwestern Idaho. In 2015, the Soda wildfire burned 14 historical eagle territories, and 8 territories were unburned. We collected data on recreation and eagle territory occupancy, confirmed egg-laying rates, young fledged per egg-laying pair, and diet in 2017 and 2018 and compared these data to pre-fire levels of recreation and eagle reproduction in 2013 and 2014. Off-road vehicle (ORV) use, as well as total use, increased in unburned areas after the fire and remained the same in burned areas. ORV use was negatively associated with eagle territory occupancy, regardless of whether the time period was before or after the fire, or whether an area had burned. Conversely, early season pedestrian use decreased in burned areas after the fire and the effect of early season pedestrian use depended on fire. Before the Soda fire, pedestrian use was negatively associated with the rate of confirmed egg-laying. In burned territories after the Soda fire, pedestrian use decreased and the rate of confirmed egglaying increased, suggesting that the decrease in pedestrian use had an interactive, positive effect on eagle reproduction. Diet ...
format Text
author Davis, Caitlin Marie
author_facet Davis, Caitlin Marie
author_sort Davis, Caitlin Marie
title Recreation, Fire and Disease Create a Mosaic of Threats for Golden Eagles in Southwestern Idaho
title_short Recreation, Fire and Disease Create a Mosaic of Threats for Golden Eagles in Southwestern Idaho
title_full Recreation, Fire and Disease Create a Mosaic of Threats for Golden Eagles in Southwestern Idaho
title_fullStr Recreation, Fire and Disease Create a Mosaic of Threats for Golden Eagles in Southwestern Idaho
title_full_unstemmed Recreation, Fire and Disease Create a Mosaic of Threats for Golden Eagles in Southwestern Idaho
title_sort recreation, fire and disease create a mosaic of threats for golden eagles in southwestern idaho
publisher ScholarWorks
publishDate 2019
url https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1590
https://doi.org/10.18122/td/1590/boisestate
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/2714/viewcontent/Davis_Caitlin_thesis_August_2019.pdf
genre Aquila chrysaetos
golden eagle
genre_facet Aquila chrysaetos
golden eagle
op_source Boise State University Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1590
doi:10.18122/td/1590/boisestate
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/2714/viewcontent/Davis_Caitlin_thesis_August_2019.pdf
op_doi https://doi.org/10.18122/td/1590/boisestate
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