Corridors for Coexistence: Evaluating Spatiotemporal Impacts of Livestock on Wildlife Community Dynamics

Livestock depredation by carnivores is a globally pervasive and detrimental interaction that leads to economic loss and retaliatory killings. Livestock trailed annually on US Rangelands impact wildlife communities- competing with ungulate herbivores for forage, disrupting predator-prey dynamics, and...

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Main Author: Trout, Edward
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks 2021
Subjects:
elk
Online Access:https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1881
https://doi.org/10.18122/td.1881.boisestate
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/3014/viewcontent/Trout_Edward_thesis_August_2021.pdf
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spelling ftboisestateu:oai:scholarworks.boisestate.edu:td-3014 2023-10-29T02:35:35+01:00 Corridors for Coexistence: Evaluating Spatiotemporal Impacts of Livestock on Wildlife Community Dynamics Trout, Edward 2021-08-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1881 https://doi.org/10.18122/td.1881.boisestate https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/3014/viewcontent/Trout_Edward_thesis_August_2021.pdf unknown ScholarWorks https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1881 doi:10.18122/td.1881.boisestate https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/3014/viewcontent/Trout_Edward_thesis_August_2021.pdf Boise State University Theses and Dissertations black bears elk grazing multi-species occupancy modeling wolves Ecology and Evolutionary Biology text 2021 ftboisestateu https://doi.org/10.18122/td.1881.boisestate 2023-09-29T15:22:31Z Livestock depredation by carnivores is a globally pervasive and detrimental interaction that leads to economic loss and retaliatory killings. Livestock trailed annually on US Rangelands impact wildlife communities- competing with ungulate herbivores for forage, disrupting predator-prey dynamics, and shifting community structures. In order to promote coexistence in these human-wildlife systems, a better understanding of how these processes interact is needed. However, studies on the topic fail to fully capture both the spatial and temporal signals of moving livestock herds. In this study I investigated the effects of sheep grazing on a wildlife community in the Big Wood River Valley, Idaho. I developed a grazing covariate that was temporally informed; and used a scaffolded modeling technique of single- and multi-species occupancy models to evaluate the effects of grazing and environmental factors on spatiotemporal processes of wildlife. Using an array of remote-triggered cameras, I sampled wildlife occurrence of focal carnivores including gray wolves (Canis lupus), American black bear (Ursus americanus), coyote (Canis latrans), and mountain lions (Puma concolor), along with ungulate herbivores mule deer (Odocoileus hemonius), elk (Cervus canadensis), and moose (Alces americanus). I evaluated processes of detection and occupancy using a single-species model for each species, two 2-species models including wolves and elk and wolves and coyotes, and a 5-species community model including bears, coyotes, mule deer, elk, and wolves. I found that the detection of bears, wolves, and mule deer was positively related in activity to grazing and 16-day NDVI (changing greenness), while the detection of elk was negatively related to grazing and 16-day NDVI. These results suggest a divergence in community makeup as sheep move into an area- increasing predator activity and shifting prey community structure. Furthermore, this work shows that including a temporally informed grazing covariate into a multi-species modeling structure ... Text Canis lupus Boise State University: Scholar Works
institution Open Polar
collection Boise State University: Scholar Works
op_collection_id ftboisestateu
language unknown
topic black bears
elk
grazing
multi-species
occupancy modeling
wolves
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
spellingShingle black bears
elk
grazing
multi-species
occupancy modeling
wolves
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Trout, Edward
Corridors for Coexistence: Evaluating Spatiotemporal Impacts of Livestock on Wildlife Community Dynamics
topic_facet black bears
elk
grazing
multi-species
occupancy modeling
wolves
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
description Livestock depredation by carnivores is a globally pervasive and detrimental interaction that leads to economic loss and retaliatory killings. Livestock trailed annually on US Rangelands impact wildlife communities- competing with ungulate herbivores for forage, disrupting predator-prey dynamics, and shifting community structures. In order to promote coexistence in these human-wildlife systems, a better understanding of how these processes interact is needed. However, studies on the topic fail to fully capture both the spatial and temporal signals of moving livestock herds. In this study I investigated the effects of sheep grazing on a wildlife community in the Big Wood River Valley, Idaho. I developed a grazing covariate that was temporally informed; and used a scaffolded modeling technique of single- and multi-species occupancy models to evaluate the effects of grazing and environmental factors on spatiotemporal processes of wildlife. Using an array of remote-triggered cameras, I sampled wildlife occurrence of focal carnivores including gray wolves (Canis lupus), American black bear (Ursus americanus), coyote (Canis latrans), and mountain lions (Puma concolor), along with ungulate herbivores mule deer (Odocoileus hemonius), elk (Cervus canadensis), and moose (Alces americanus). I evaluated processes of detection and occupancy using a single-species model for each species, two 2-species models including wolves and elk and wolves and coyotes, and a 5-species community model including bears, coyotes, mule deer, elk, and wolves. I found that the detection of bears, wolves, and mule deer was positively related in activity to grazing and 16-day NDVI (changing greenness), while the detection of elk was negatively related to grazing and 16-day NDVI. These results suggest a divergence in community makeup as sheep move into an area- increasing predator activity and shifting prey community structure. Furthermore, this work shows that including a temporally informed grazing covariate into a multi-species modeling structure ...
format Text
author Trout, Edward
author_facet Trout, Edward
author_sort Trout, Edward
title Corridors for Coexistence: Evaluating Spatiotemporal Impacts of Livestock on Wildlife Community Dynamics
title_short Corridors for Coexistence: Evaluating Spatiotemporal Impacts of Livestock on Wildlife Community Dynamics
title_full Corridors for Coexistence: Evaluating Spatiotemporal Impacts of Livestock on Wildlife Community Dynamics
title_fullStr Corridors for Coexistence: Evaluating Spatiotemporal Impacts of Livestock on Wildlife Community Dynamics
title_full_unstemmed Corridors for Coexistence: Evaluating Spatiotemporal Impacts of Livestock on Wildlife Community Dynamics
title_sort corridors for coexistence: evaluating spatiotemporal impacts of livestock on wildlife community dynamics
publisher ScholarWorks
publishDate 2021
url https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1881
https://doi.org/10.18122/td.1881.boisestate
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/3014/viewcontent/Trout_Edward_thesis_August_2021.pdf
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_source Boise State University Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/1881
doi:10.18122/td.1881.boisestate
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/td/article/3014/viewcontent/Trout_Edward_thesis_August_2021.pdf
op_doi https://doi.org/10.18122/td.1881.boisestate
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