Reducing Moose–Vehicle Collisions through Salt Pool Removal and Displacement: an Agent-Based Modeling Approach

Between 1990 and 2002, more than 200 moose–vehicle collisions occurred each year in Quebec, including about 50/yr in the Laurentides Wildlife Reserve. One cause is the presence of roadside salt pools that attract moose near roads in the spring and summer. Using the computer simulation technique of a...

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Main Authors: Grosman, Paul D., Jaeger, Jochen A. G., Biron, Pascale M.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol14/iss2/art17/
id ftjecolog:oai:.www.ecologyandsociety.org:article/2941
record_format openpolar
spelling ftjecolog:oai:.www.ecologyandsociety.org:article/2941 2023-05-15T13:13:49+02:00 Reducing Moose–Vehicle Collisions through Salt Pool Removal and Displacement: an Agent-Based Modeling Approach Grosman, Paul D. Jaeger, Jochen A. G. Biron, Pascale M. 2009-09-11 text/html application/pdf http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol14/iss2/art17/ en eng Resilience Alliance Ecology and Society; Vol. 14, No. 2 (2009) agent-based modeling Alces alces moose Laurentides Wildlife Reserve Quebec roads road mortality salt pools wildlife–vehicle collisions Peer-Reviewed Reports 2009 ftjecolog 2019-04-09T11:22:41Z Between 1990 and 2002, more than 200 moose–vehicle collisions occurred each year in Quebec, including about 50/yr in the Laurentides Wildlife Reserve. One cause is the presence of roadside salt pools that attract moose near roads in the spring and summer. Using the computer simulation technique of agent-based modeling, this study investigated whether salt pool removal and displacement, i.e., a compensatory salt pool set up 100 to 1500 m away from the road shoulder, would reduce the number of moose–vehicle collisions. Moose road crossings were used as a proxy measure. A GPS telemetry data set consisting of approximately 200,000 locations of 47 moose over 2 yr in the Laurentides Wildlife Reserve was used as an empirical basis for the model. Twelve moose were selected from this data set and programmed in the model to forage and travel in the study area. Five parameters with an additional application of stochasticity were used to determine moose movement between forest polygons. These included food quality; cover quality, i.e., protection from predators and thermal stress; proximity to salt pools; proximity to water; and slope. There was a significant reduction in road crossings when either all or two thirds of the roadside salt pools were removed, with and/or without salt pool displacement. With 100% salt pool removal, the reduction was greater (49%) without compensatory salt pools than with them (18%). When two thirds of the salt pools were removed, the reduction was the same with and without compensatory salt pools (16%). Although moose–vehicle collisions are not a significant mortality factor for the moose population in the Laurentides Wildlife Reserve, in areas with higher road densities, hunting pressure, and/or predator densities it could mean the difference between a stable and a declining population, and salt pool removal could be part of a good mitigation plan to halt population declines. This model can be used, with improvements such as spatial memory of salt pool locations and the addition of a road avoidance behavior, to assess the effectiveness of mitigation measures intended to reduce moose–vehicle collisions. Other/Unknown Material Alces alces Unknown
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftjecolog
language English
topic agent-based modeling
Alces alces
moose
Laurentides Wildlife Reserve
Quebec
roads
road mortality
salt pools
wildlife–vehicle collisions
spellingShingle agent-based modeling
Alces alces
moose
Laurentides Wildlife Reserve
Quebec
roads
road mortality
salt pools
wildlife–vehicle collisions
Grosman, Paul D.
Jaeger, Jochen A. G.
Biron, Pascale M.
Reducing Moose–Vehicle Collisions through Salt Pool Removal and Displacement: an Agent-Based Modeling Approach
topic_facet agent-based modeling
Alces alces
moose
Laurentides Wildlife Reserve
Quebec
roads
road mortality
salt pools
wildlife–vehicle collisions
description Between 1990 and 2002, more than 200 moose–vehicle collisions occurred each year in Quebec, including about 50/yr in the Laurentides Wildlife Reserve. One cause is the presence of roadside salt pools that attract moose near roads in the spring and summer. Using the computer simulation technique of agent-based modeling, this study investigated whether salt pool removal and displacement, i.e., a compensatory salt pool set up 100 to 1500 m away from the road shoulder, would reduce the number of moose–vehicle collisions. Moose road crossings were used as a proxy measure. A GPS telemetry data set consisting of approximately 200,000 locations of 47 moose over 2 yr in the Laurentides Wildlife Reserve was used as an empirical basis for the model. Twelve moose were selected from this data set and programmed in the model to forage and travel in the study area. Five parameters with an additional application of stochasticity were used to determine moose movement between forest polygons. These included food quality; cover quality, i.e., protection from predators and thermal stress; proximity to salt pools; proximity to water; and slope. There was a significant reduction in road crossings when either all or two thirds of the roadside salt pools were removed, with and/or without salt pool displacement. With 100% salt pool removal, the reduction was greater (49%) without compensatory salt pools than with them (18%). When two thirds of the salt pools were removed, the reduction was the same with and without compensatory salt pools (16%). Although moose–vehicle collisions are not a significant mortality factor for the moose population in the Laurentides Wildlife Reserve, in areas with higher road densities, hunting pressure, and/or predator densities it could mean the difference between a stable and a declining population, and salt pool removal could be part of a good mitigation plan to halt population declines. This model can be used, with improvements such as spatial memory of salt pool locations and the addition of a road avoidance behavior, to assess the effectiveness of mitigation measures intended to reduce moose–vehicle collisions.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Grosman, Paul D.
Jaeger, Jochen A. G.
Biron, Pascale M.
author_facet Grosman, Paul D.
Jaeger, Jochen A. G.
Biron, Pascale M.
author_sort Grosman, Paul D.
title Reducing Moose–Vehicle Collisions through Salt Pool Removal and Displacement: an Agent-Based Modeling Approach
title_short Reducing Moose–Vehicle Collisions through Salt Pool Removal and Displacement: an Agent-Based Modeling Approach
title_full Reducing Moose–Vehicle Collisions through Salt Pool Removal and Displacement: an Agent-Based Modeling Approach
title_fullStr Reducing Moose–Vehicle Collisions through Salt Pool Removal and Displacement: an Agent-Based Modeling Approach
title_full_unstemmed Reducing Moose–Vehicle Collisions through Salt Pool Removal and Displacement: an Agent-Based Modeling Approach
title_sort reducing moose–vehicle collisions through salt pool removal and displacement: an agent-based modeling approach
publisher Resilience Alliance
publishDate 2009
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol14/iss2/art17/
genre Alces alces
genre_facet Alces alces
op_source Ecology and Society; Vol. 14, No. 2 (2009)
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