Estimating effects of adult male mortality on grizzly bear population growth and persistence using matrix models

We radio monitored a hunted, sexually segregated grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) population and an unhunted, unsegregated population for demographics and constructed a stage- and age-classified matrix model to test for the effects of adult male mortality and resulting sexual segregation on population gr...

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Main Authors: Wielgus, R.B., Sarrazin, F., Ferriere, R., Clobert, J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Elsevier 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pure.iiasa.ac.at/id/eprint/6365/
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spelling ftiiasalaxendare:oai:pure.iiasa.ac.at:6365 2023-05-15T18:42:11+02:00 Estimating effects of adult male mortality on grizzly bear population growth and persistence using matrix models Wielgus, R.B. Sarrazin, F. Ferriere, R. Clobert, J. 2001-04 http://pure.iiasa.ac.at/id/eprint/6365/ unknown Elsevier Wielgus, R.B., Sarrazin, F., Ferriere, R. <http://pure.iiasa.ac.at/view/iiasa/1248.html>, & Clobert, J. (2001). Estimating effects of adult male mortality on grizzly bear population growth and persistence using matrix models. Biological Conservation 98 (3) 293-303. 10.1016/S0006-3207(00)00168-3 <https://doi.org/10.1016/S0006-3207(00)00168-3>. Article PeerReviewed 2001 ftiiasalaxendare 2022-04-15T12:30:55Z We radio monitored a hunted, sexually segregated grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) population and an unhunted, unsegregated population for demographics and constructed a stage- and age-classified matrix model to test for the effects of adult male mortality and resulting sexual segregation on population growth and persistence. Population parameters in the model were adult female survival, subadult female survival, offspring survival, probability of litter sizes, and probability of unsuccessful pregnancy. The last three parameters were affected by adult male mortality and segregation, the others were not. We compared population growth with and without effects of hunting by holding adult female and subadult female survival constant and by using hunted and unhunted values for offspring survival, litter size, and pregnancy. Population growth (Lambda) showed the greatest elasticity for adult survival, subadult survival, offspring survival, litter size, and unsuccessful pregnancy, in that order. This corresponds with observed anti-infanticide tactics (sexual segregation) by adult females to maximize their fitness. The hunted population decreased at a rate of 0.99 whereas the simulated, unhunted population increased at a rate of 1.05. The hunted population was much more susceptible to population extinction. Under demographic stochasticity mean time to extinction was 32 years in the hunted population and 110 years in the unhunted population. Under environmental stochasicity mean time to extinction was 21 years in the hunted population and 43 years in the unhunted population. We suggest that sexual segregation caused by hunting resident adult males can result in population decline and can even contribute to rapid population extinctions when numbers are small. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ursus arctos IIASA DARE (Data Repository of the International Institute of Applied Systems Analysis) Lambda ENVELOPE(-62.983,-62.983,-64.300,-64.300)
institution Open Polar
collection IIASA DARE (Data Repository of the International Institute of Applied Systems Analysis)
op_collection_id ftiiasalaxendare
language unknown
description We radio monitored a hunted, sexually segregated grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) population and an unhunted, unsegregated population for demographics and constructed a stage- and age-classified matrix model to test for the effects of adult male mortality and resulting sexual segregation on population growth and persistence. Population parameters in the model were adult female survival, subadult female survival, offspring survival, probability of litter sizes, and probability of unsuccessful pregnancy. The last three parameters were affected by adult male mortality and segregation, the others were not. We compared population growth with and without effects of hunting by holding adult female and subadult female survival constant and by using hunted and unhunted values for offspring survival, litter size, and pregnancy. Population growth (Lambda) showed the greatest elasticity for adult survival, subadult survival, offspring survival, litter size, and unsuccessful pregnancy, in that order. This corresponds with observed anti-infanticide tactics (sexual segregation) by adult females to maximize their fitness. The hunted population decreased at a rate of 0.99 whereas the simulated, unhunted population increased at a rate of 1.05. The hunted population was much more susceptible to population extinction. Under demographic stochasticity mean time to extinction was 32 years in the hunted population and 110 years in the unhunted population. Under environmental stochasicity mean time to extinction was 21 years in the hunted population and 43 years in the unhunted population. We suggest that sexual segregation caused by hunting resident adult males can result in population decline and can even contribute to rapid population extinctions when numbers are small.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Wielgus, R.B.
Sarrazin, F.
Ferriere, R.
Clobert, J.
spellingShingle Wielgus, R.B.
Sarrazin, F.
Ferriere, R.
Clobert, J.
Estimating effects of adult male mortality on grizzly bear population growth and persistence using matrix models
author_facet Wielgus, R.B.
Sarrazin, F.
Ferriere, R.
Clobert, J.
author_sort Wielgus, R.B.
title Estimating effects of adult male mortality on grizzly bear population growth and persistence using matrix models
title_short Estimating effects of adult male mortality on grizzly bear population growth and persistence using matrix models
title_full Estimating effects of adult male mortality on grizzly bear population growth and persistence using matrix models
title_fullStr Estimating effects of adult male mortality on grizzly bear population growth and persistence using matrix models
title_full_unstemmed Estimating effects of adult male mortality on grizzly bear population growth and persistence using matrix models
title_sort estimating effects of adult male mortality on grizzly bear population growth and persistence using matrix models
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2001
url http://pure.iiasa.ac.at/id/eprint/6365/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.983,-62.983,-64.300,-64.300)
geographic Lambda
geographic_facet Lambda
genre Ursus arctos
genre_facet Ursus arctos
op_relation Wielgus, R.B., Sarrazin, F., Ferriere, R. <http://pure.iiasa.ac.at/view/iiasa/1248.html>, & Clobert, J. (2001). Estimating effects of adult male mortality on grizzly bear population growth and persistence using matrix models. Biological Conservation 98 (3) 293-303. 10.1016/S0006-3207(00)00168-3 <https://doi.org/10.1016/S0006-3207(00)00168-3>.
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