Does Wolf Management in Latvia Decrease Livestock Depredation? An Analysis of Available Data

In Latvia, livestock depredation by wolves has increased during the last two decades. Most of the attacks occur in summer and autumn during wolf hunting season. Use of effective preventive measures in Latvia is low, and farmers primarily rely on wolf hunting as a depredation reduction measure. The t...

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Published in:Sustainability
Main Authors: Jurģis Šuba, Agrita Žunna, Guna Bagrade, Gundega Done, Aivars Ornicāns, Digna Pilāte, Alda Stepanova, Jānis Ozoliņš
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2023
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/su15118509
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author Jurģis Šuba
Agrita Žunna
Guna Bagrade
Gundega Done
Aivars Ornicāns
Digna Pilāte
Alda Stepanova
Jānis Ozoliņš
author_facet Jurģis Šuba
Agrita Žunna
Guna Bagrade
Gundega Done
Aivars Ornicāns
Digna Pilāte
Alda Stepanova
Jānis Ozoliņš
author_sort Jurģis Šuba
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
container_issue 11
container_start_page 8509
container_title Sustainability
container_volume 15
description In Latvia, livestock depredation by wolves has increased during the last two decades. Most of the attacks occur in summer and autumn during wolf hunting season. Use of effective preventive measures in Latvia is low, and farmers primarily rely on wolf hunting as a depredation reduction measure. The total numbers of wolf attacks and number of affected sheep per year in regional forest management units were analyzed in relation to the estimated wolf density, extent of culling, and proportion of juveniles, as well as the sheep density and estimated number of wild prey animals. The response variables (number of attacks and affected sheep per year) were modelled using a negative binomial regression, testing the effects of every covariate separately and building models from the significant covariates. The depredation level was related to sheep density and estimated wolf population size. No reducing effect was found for culling, and an even greater depredation rate was expected when the proportion of culled wolves increased. In addition, no significant effect was associated with the other covariates. However, greater numbers of affected sheep were expected at higher red deer density, suggesting increased opportunistic livestock depredation when red deer locally outcompete roe deer, the preferred wolf prey in Latvia.
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2071-1050/15/11/8509/ 2025-01-16T21:25:57+00:00 Does Wolf Management in Latvia Decrease Livestock Depredation? An Analysis of Available Data Jurģis Šuba Agrita Žunna Guna Bagrade Gundega Done Aivars Ornicāns Digna Pilāte Alda Stepanova Jānis Ozoliņš agris 2023-05-24 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/su15118509 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Sustainability, Biodiversity and Conservation https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su15118509 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Sustainability; Volume 15; Issue 11; Pages: 8509 wolf Canis lupus livestock depredation Latvia Text 2023 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/su15118509 2023-08-01T10:11:46Z In Latvia, livestock depredation by wolves has increased during the last two decades. Most of the attacks occur in summer and autumn during wolf hunting season. Use of effective preventive measures in Latvia is low, and farmers primarily rely on wolf hunting as a depredation reduction measure. The total numbers of wolf attacks and number of affected sheep per year in regional forest management units were analyzed in relation to the estimated wolf density, extent of culling, and proportion of juveniles, as well as the sheep density and estimated number of wild prey animals. The response variables (number of attacks and affected sheep per year) were modelled using a negative binomial regression, testing the effects of every covariate separately and building models from the significant covariates. The depredation level was related to sheep density and estimated wolf population size. No reducing effect was found for culling, and an even greater depredation rate was expected when the proportion of culled wolves increased. In addition, no significant effect was associated with the other covariates. However, greater numbers of affected sheep were expected at higher red deer density, suggesting increased opportunistic livestock depredation when red deer locally outcompete roe deer, the preferred wolf prey in Latvia. Text Canis lupus MDPI Open Access Publishing Sustainability 15 11 8509
spellingShingle wolf
Canis lupus
livestock
depredation
Latvia
Jurģis Šuba
Agrita Žunna
Guna Bagrade
Gundega Done
Aivars Ornicāns
Digna Pilāte
Alda Stepanova
Jānis Ozoliņš
Does Wolf Management in Latvia Decrease Livestock Depredation? An Analysis of Available Data
title Does Wolf Management in Latvia Decrease Livestock Depredation? An Analysis of Available Data
title_full Does Wolf Management in Latvia Decrease Livestock Depredation? An Analysis of Available Data
title_fullStr Does Wolf Management in Latvia Decrease Livestock Depredation? An Analysis of Available Data
title_full_unstemmed Does Wolf Management in Latvia Decrease Livestock Depredation? An Analysis of Available Data
title_short Does Wolf Management in Latvia Decrease Livestock Depredation? An Analysis of Available Data
title_sort does wolf management in latvia decrease livestock depredation? an analysis of available data
topic wolf
Canis lupus
livestock
depredation
Latvia
topic_facet wolf
Canis lupus
livestock
depredation
Latvia
url https://doi.org/10.3390/su15118509