Integrating Social Dimensions into Spatial Connectivity Planning for Grizzly Bears

In anthropogenic landscapes, which prevail globally, preserving key habitat corridors or routes between wildlife populations is vital for long-term species persistence. Animals moving through these corridors can encounter a number of barriers, including roads, fences, or other human land-uses. Addit...

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Main Author: Sage, Abigail
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks 2019
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Online Access:https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1605
https://doi.org/10.18122/td/1605/boisestate
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/2731/viewcontent/Sage_Abby_thesis_December_2019.pdf
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spelling ftboisestateu:oai:scholarworks.boisestate.edu:td-2731 2023-10-29T02:40:45+01:00 Integrating Social Dimensions into Spatial Connectivity Planning for Grizzly Bears Sage, Abigail 2019-12-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1605 https://doi.org/10.18122/td/1605/boisestate https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/2731/viewcontent/Sage_Abby_thesis_December_2019.pdf unknown ScholarWorks https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1605 doi:10.18122/td/1605/boisestate https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/2731/viewcontent/Sage_Abby_thesis_December_2019.pdf Boise State University Theses and Dissertations social dimensions spatial connectivity carnivores Biology text 2019 ftboisestateu https://doi.org/10.18122/td/1605/boisestate 2023-09-29T15:19:58Z In anthropogenic landscapes, which prevail globally, preserving key habitat corridors or routes between wildlife populations is vital for long-term species persistence. Animals moving through these corridors can encounter a number of barriers, including roads, fences, or other human land-uses. Additionally, people unwilling to cohabitate with wildlife can also kill animals considered nuisances or disturb animals in ways that reduce their fitness. The spatial patterns of human tolerance therefore play an important role in the efficacy of habitat corridors. Although there are large bodies of research on habitat corridors and human attitudes toward wildlife, studies that examine the spatial interaction of the two are nonexistent. In this thesis, I examined spatial patterns of two social dimensions, attitudes and behaviors, of ranchers along key dispersal corridors for grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) between North American source populations: the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem and the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem. I focused on this system because risks from grizzlies on rancher safety and livelihoods exacerbate disagreements among different stakeholder groups on where grizzlies should be allowed to expand and how to manage their populations. First, I measured acceptance of ranchers toward grizzly bears through a mail questionnaire of 505 respondents. I found that social acceptance was positively related to the area of wildland-urban interface and number of conservation easements in the surrounding landscape, and was negatively related to distance to occupied bear range. Spatial predictions revealed several areas where low acceptance was aggregated within critical bear habitat corridors, which could potentially act as significant barriers to bear movement (Chapter 1). Next, I investigated spatial patterns of rancher use of four techniques that are meant to prevent conflict with grizzly bears and other predators. Three were methods that prevent mortality - carcass removal, fencing around livestock, and nonlethal ... Text Ursus arctos Boise State University: Scholar Works
institution Open Polar
collection Boise State University: Scholar Works
op_collection_id ftboisestateu
language unknown
topic social dimensions
spatial
connectivity
carnivores
Biology
spellingShingle social dimensions
spatial
connectivity
carnivores
Biology
Sage, Abigail
Integrating Social Dimensions into Spatial Connectivity Planning for Grizzly Bears
topic_facet social dimensions
spatial
connectivity
carnivores
Biology
description In anthropogenic landscapes, which prevail globally, preserving key habitat corridors or routes between wildlife populations is vital for long-term species persistence. Animals moving through these corridors can encounter a number of barriers, including roads, fences, or other human land-uses. Additionally, people unwilling to cohabitate with wildlife can also kill animals considered nuisances or disturb animals in ways that reduce their fitness. The spatial patterns of human tolerance therefore play an important role in the efficacy of habitat corridors. Although there are large bodies of research on habitat corridors and human attitudes toward wildlife, studies that examine the spatial interaction of the two are nonexistent. In this thesis, I examined spatial patterns of two social dimensions, attitudes and behaviors, of ranchers along key dispersal corridors for grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) between North American source populations: the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem and the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem. I focused on this system because risks from grizzlies on rancher safety and livelihoods exacerbate disagreements among different stakeholder groups on where grizzlies should be allowed to expand and how to manage their populations. First, I measured acceptance of ranchers toward grizzly bears through a mail questionnaire of 505 respondents. I found that social acceptance was positively related to the area of wildland-urban interface and number of conservation easements in the surrounding landscape, and was negatively related to distance to occupied bear range. Spatial predictions revealed several areas where low acceptance was aggregated within critical bear habitat corridors, which could potentially act as significant barriers to bear movement (Chapter 1). Next, I investigated spatial patterns of rancher use of four techniques that are meant to prevent conflict with grizzly bears and other predators. Three were methods that prevent mortality - carcass removal, fencing around livestock, and nonlethal ...
format Text
author Sage, Abigail
author_facet Sage, Abigail
author_sort Sage, Abigail
title Integrating Social Dimensions into Spatial Connectivity Planning for Grizzly Bears
title_short Integrating Social Dimensions into Spatial Connectivity Planning for Grizzly Bears
title_full Integrating Social Dimensions into Spatial Connectivity Planning for Grizzly Bears
title_fullStr Integrating Social Dimensions into Spatial Connectivity Planning for Grizzly Bears
title_full_unstemmed Integrating Social Dimensions into Spatial Connectivity Planning for Grizzly Bears
title_sort integrating social dimensions into spatial connectivity planning for grizzly bears
publisher ScholarWorks
publishDate 2019
url https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1605
https://doi.org/10.18122/td/1605/boisestate
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/2731/viewcontent/Sage_Abby_thesis_December_2019.pdf
genre Ursus arctos
genre_facet Ursus arctos
op_source Boise State University Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1605
doi:10.18122/td/1605/boisestate
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/2731/viewcontent/Sage_Abby_thesis_December_2019.pdf
op_doi https://doi.org/10.18122/td/1605/boisestate
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