MICROHABITAT CHARACTERISTICS OF MOOSE WINTER ACTIVITY SITES IN SOUTH-CENTRAL MONTANA

Analysis of microhabitat of animal activity sites may help determine both site-specific and activity-specific selection criteria and can have important management applications that can replicate similar site characteristics. I compared physical and vegetative characteristics of winter feeding (N = 4...

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Main Author: Van Dyke, Fred
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Lakehead University 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:http://alcesjournal.org/index.php/alces/article/view/869
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spelling ftjalces:oai:ojs.pkp.sfu.ca:article/869 2023-05-15T13:13:40+02:00 MICROHABITAT CHARACTERISTICS OF MOOSE WINTER ACTIVITY SITES IN SOUTH-CENTRAL MONTANA Van Dyke, Fred 1995-01-01 application/pdf http://alcesjournal.org/index.php/alces/article/view/869 eng eng Lakehead University http://alcesjournal.org/index.php/alces/article/view/869/945 http://alcesjournal.org/index.php/alces/article/view/869 Alces: A Journal Devoted to the Biology and Management of Moose; Vol. 31 (1995): Alces Vol. 31 (1995); 27-33 2293-6629 0835-5851 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 1995 ftjalces 2022-02-12T19:35:52Z Analysis of microhabitat of animal activity sites may help determine both site-specific and activity-specific selection criteria and can have important management applications that can replicate similar site characteristics. I compared physical and vegetative characteristics of winter feeding (N = 46), resting (N = 17), and travel route (N = 19) sites of Shiras moose (Alces alces shirasi) in south-central Montana to those of 84 randomly selected sites within moose home ranges. Means of tree diameters, tree densities, sapling densities, percent shrub coverages, percent canopy closures, canopy heights, and slopes were not independent of site categories. Feeding sites in riparian habitats were higher in shrub coverage than all other activity site categories and random sites. Feeding sites in riparian habitats had lower percentage canopy closure, lower canopy height, less slope, and lower values of tree density, tree dbh, and sampling dbh then randomly selected riparian sites. Travel corridor sites used by moose in upland forests were higher in percent shrub coverage than randomly selected forest sites, and had less slope, lower average tree dbh, and lower average sapling dbh. A discriminant analysis of riparian habitat sites constructed from measured site variables correctly classified 71% of resting sites, 70% of feeding sites, 57% of travel route sites, and 40% of random sites. A discriminant analysis of a planned forest habitat sites correctly classified 81% of random sites and 75% of travel corridor sites. Analysis of Mahalanobis distances indicated that site categories represented significantly different groups, with the exception of random sites and travel corridor sites in riparian habitats. Significant differences in tree and sapling densities, canopy height enclosure, shrub coverage, slope and aspect among moose activity sites demonstrate variables common to forest management prescriptions. Such an approach offers potential for forest managers to manage individual sites in ways that create microhabitat moose may use for specific activities. Article in Journal/Newspaper Alces alces Alces (A Journal Devoted to the Biology and Management of Moose)
institution Open Polar
collection Alces (A Journal Devoted to the Biology and Management of Moose)
op_collection_id ftjalces
language English
description Analysis of microhabitat of animal activity sites may help determine both site-specific and activity-specific selection criteria and can have important management applications that can replicate similar site characteristics. I compared physical and vegetative characteristics of winter feeding (N = 46), resting (N = 17), and travel route (N = 19) sites of Shiras moose (Alces alces shirasi) in south-central Montana to those of 84 randomly selected sites within moose home ranges. Means of tree diameters, tree densities, sapling densities, percent shrub coverages, percent canopy closures, canopy heights, and slopes were not independent of site categories. Feeding sites in riparian habitats were higher in shrub coverage than all other activity site categories and random sites. Feeding sites in riparian habitats had lower percentage canopy closure, lower canopy height, less slope, and lower values of tree density, tree dbh, and sampling dbh then randomly selected riparian sites. Travel corridor sites used by moose in upland forests were higher in percent shrub coverage than randomly selected forest sites, and had less slope, lower average tree dbh, and lower average sapling dbh. A discriminant analysis of riparian habitat sites constructed from measured site variables correctly classified 71% of resting sites, 70% of feeding sites, 57% of travel route sites, and 40% of random sites. A discriminant analysis of a planned forest habitat sites correctly classified 81% of random sites and 75% of travel corridor sites. Analysis of Mahalanobis distances indicated that site categories represented significantly different groups, with the exception of random sites and travel corridor sites in riparian habitats. Significant differences in tree and sapling densities, canopy height enclosure, shrub coverage, slope and aspect among moose activity sites demonstrate variables common to forest management prescriptions. Such an approach offers potential for forest managers to manage individual sites in ways that create microhabitat moose may use for specific activities.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Van Dyke, Fred
spellingShingle Van Dyke, Fred
MICROHABITAT CHARACTERISTICS OF MOOSE WINTER ACTIVITY SITES IN SOUTH-CENTRAL MONTANA
author_facet Van Dyke, Fred
author_sort Van Dyke, Fred
title MICROHABITAT CHARACTERISTICS OF MOOSE WINTER ACTIVITY SITES IN SOUTH-CENTRAL MONTANA
title_short MICROHABITAT CHARACTERISTICS OF MOOSE WINTER ACTIVITY SITES IN SOUTH-CENTRAL MONTANA
title_full MICROHABITAT CHARACTERISTICS OF MOOSE WINTER ACTIVITY SITES IN SOUTH-CENTRAL MONTANA
title_fullStr MICROHABITAT CHARACTERISTICS OF MOOSE WINTER ACTIVITY SITES IN SOUTH-CENTRAL MONTANA
title_full_unstemmed MICROHABITAT CHARACTERISTICS OF MOOSE WINTER ACTIVITY SITES IN SOUTH-CENTRAL MONTANA
title_sort microhabitat characteristics of moose winter activity sites in south-central montana
publisher Lakehead University
publishDate 1995
url http://alcesjournal.org/index.php/alces/article/view/869
genre Alces alces
genre_facet Alces alces
op_source Alces: A Journal Devoted to the Biology and Management of Moose; Vol. 31 (1995): Alces Vol. 31 (1995); 27-33
2293-6629
0835-5851
op_relation http://alcesjournal.org/index.php/alces/article/view/869/945
http://alcesjournal.org/index.php/alces/article/view/869
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