Data from: Phantoms of the forest: legacy risk effects of a regionally extinct large carnivore ...

The increased abundance of large carnivores in Europe is a conservation success, but the impact on the behavior and population dynamics of prey species is generally unknown. In Europe, the recolonization of large carnivores often occurs in areas where humans have greatly modified the landscape throu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sahlén, Ellinor, Noell, Sonja, DePerno, Christopher S., Kindberg, Jonas, Spong, Göran, Cromsigt, Joris P. G. M., Cromsigt, Joris P.G.M.
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.70651
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.70651
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Summary:The increased abundance of large carnivores in Europe is a conservation success, but the impact on the behavior and population dynamics of prey species is generally unknown. In Europe, the recolonization of large carnivores often occurs in areas where humans have greatly modified the landscape through forestry or agriculture. Currently, we poorly understand the effects of recolonizing large carnivores on extant prey species in anthropogenic landscapes. Here, we investigated if ungulate prey species showed innate responses to the scent of a regionally exterminated but native large carnivore, and whether the responses were affected by human-induced habitat openness. We experimentally introduced brown bear Ursus arctos scent to artificial feeding sites and used camera traps to document the responses of three sympatric ungulate species. In addition to controls without scent, reindeer scent Rangifer tarandus was used as a noncarnivore, novel control scent. Fallow deer Dama dama strongly avoided areas with bear ... : Ungulate visitation to scent treatment sitesDatavisits.txt ...