Wolverine habitat quality, connectivity, and prioritization at the landscape scale

The core of conservation biology is understanding how to mitigate the impacts of anthropogenic activities on species. These impacts are particularly detrimental to isolated and small populations, which face extirpation or extinction without immediate conservation action. For small and isolated popul...

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Main Author: Carroll, Kathleen Anne
Other Authors: Chairperson, Graduate Committee: Andrew J. Hansen, Andrew J. Hansen, Robert M. Inman and Rick L. Lawrence were co-authors of the article, 'Comparing methods to disentangle habitat predictors for wolverines in the southern extent of their distribution' which is contained within this dissertation., Andrew J. Hansen, Robert M. Inman, Rick L. Lawrence and Andrew B. Hoegh were co-authors of the article, 'Testing landscape resistance layers and modeling connectivity for wolverines in the western US' which is contained within this dissertation., Robert M. Inman, Andrew J. Hansen, Kevin Barnett and Rick L. Lawrence were co-authors of the article, 'Prioritizing metapopulation connectivity for wolverines' which is contained within this dissertation.
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Letters & Science 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/16379
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftmontanastateu:oai:scholarworks.montana.edu:1/16379 2023-05-15T16:32:21+02:00 Wolverine habitat quality, connectivity, and prioritization at the landscape scale Carroll, Kathleen Anne Chairperson, Graduate Committee: Andrew J. Hansen Andrew J. Hansen, Robert M. Inman and Rick L. Lawrence were co-authors of the article, 'Comparing methods to disentangle habitat predictors for wolverines in the southern extent of their distribution' which is contained within this dissertation. Andrew J. Hansen, Robert M. Inman, Rick L. Lawrence and Andrew B. Hoegh were co-authors of the article, 'Testing landscape resistance layers and modeling connectivity for wolverines in the western US' which is contained within this dissertation. Robert M. Inman, Andrew J. Hansen, Kevin Barnett and Rick L. Lawrence were co-authors of the article, 'Prioritizing metapopulation connectivity for wolverines' which is contained within this dissertation. 2019 application/pdf https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/16379 en eng Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Letters & Science https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/16379 Copyright 2019 by Kathleen Anne Carroll Wolverine Conservation biology Habitat selection Corridors (Ecology) Human-animal relationships Wildlife management Dissertation 2019 ftmontanastateu 2022-06-06T07:29:00Z The core of conservation biology is understanding how to mitigate the impacts of anthropogenic activities on species. These impacts are particularly detrimental to isolated and small populations, which face extirpation or extinction without immediate conservation action. For small and isolated populations, protecting connective habitat (e.g., corridors) and facilitating movement is key. Corridor identification requires rigorous planning and appropriate statistical choices to ensure that resulting conservation actions are defensible and best support ecological processes. This manuscript asks: 1) how do different, commonly used statistical methods inform our understanding of species resource selection across scale and between sexes, 2) how does landscape resistance and connectivity differ between resident and dispersing individuals, and 3) what information is important to include in a systematic conservation plan to best support on-the-ground conservation between land trusts, landowners, and other practitioners under future climate change conditions. To address each of these questions we focused on wolverines (Gulo gulo), which exist as isolated metapopulations across the western contiguous United States. Our key findings included that 1) the importance of habitat variables differ only slightly by sex, across selection scales, and across analysis methods, 2) dispersing animals are less sensitive to habitat quality compared to resident animals, and 3) including information that both helps mitigate potential threats and preserves ecological processes is the best approach for connectivity conservation planning. This work represents the most comprehensive wolverine connectivity conservation analyses to date. This research suggests that examining multiple approaches and validating results is critical to generating rigorous and defensible conservation decisions are being made for wolverines, although more studies are needed to validate this in other species. Taken together, this research provides land managers, policy ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Gulo gulo wolverine Montana State University (MSU): ScholarWorks
institution Open Polar
collection Montana State University (MSU): ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftmontanastateu
language English
topic Wolverine
Conservation biology
Habitat selection
Corridors (Ecology)
Human-animal relationships
Wildlife management
spellingShingle Wolverine
Conservation biology
Habitat selection
Corridors (Ecology)
Human-animal relationships
Wildlife management
Carroll, Kathleen Anne
Wolverine habitat quality, connectivity, and prioritization at the landscape scale
topic_facet Wolverine
Conservation biology
Habitat selection
Corridors (Ecology)
Human-animal relationships
Wildlife management
description The core of conservation biology is understanding how to mitigate the impacts of anthropogenic activities on species. These impacts are particularly detrimental to isolated and small populations, which face extirpation or extinction without immediate conservation action. For small and isolated populations, protecting connective habitat (e.g., corridors) and facilitating movement is key. Corridor identification requires rigorous planning and appropriate statistical choices to ensure that resulting conservation actions are defensible and best support ecological processes. This manuscript asks: 1) how do different, commonly used statistical methods inform our understanding of species resource selection across scale and between sexes, 2) how does landscape resistance and connectivity differ between resident and dispersing individuals, and 3) what information is important to include in a systematic conservation plan to best support on-the-ground conservation between land trusts, landowners, and other practitioners under future climate change conditions. To address each of these questions we focused on wolverines (Gulo gulo), which exist as isolated metapopulations across the western contiguous United States. Our key findings included that 1) the importance of habitat variables differ only slightly by sex, across selection scales, and across analysis methods, 2) dispersing animals are less sensitive to habitat quality compared to resident animals, and 3) including information that both helps mitigate potential threats and preserves ecological processes is the best approach for connectivity conservation planning. This work represents the most comprehensive wolverine connectivity conservation analyses to date. This research suggests that examining multiple approaches and validating results is critical to generating rigorous and defensible conservation decisions are being made for wolverines, although more studies are needed to validate this in other species. Taken together, this research provides land managers, policy ...
author2 Chairperson, Graduate Committee: Andrew J. Hansen
Andrew J. Hansen, Robert M. Inman and Rick L. Lawrence were co-authors of the article, 'Comparing methods to disentangle habitat predictors for wolverines in the southern extent of their distribution' which is contained within this dissertation.
Andrew J. Hansen, Robert M. Inman, Rick L. Lawrence and Andrew B. Hoegh were co-authors of the article, 'Testing landscape resistance layers and modeling connectivity for wolverines in the western US' which is contained within this dissertation.
Robert M. Inman, Andrew J. Hansen, Kevin Barnett and Rick L. Lawrence were co-authors of the article, 'Prioritizing metapopulation connectivity for wolverines' which is contained within this dissertation.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Carroll, Kathleen Anne
author_facet Carroll, Kathleen Anne
author_sort Carroll, Kathleen Anne
title Wolverine habitat quality, connectivity, and prioritization at the landscape scale
title_short Wolverine habitat quality, connectivity, and prioritization at the landscape scale
title_full Wolverine habitat quality, connectivity, and prioritization at the landscape scale
title_fullStr Wolverine habitat quality, connectivity, and prioritization at the landscape scale
title_full_unstemmed Wolverine habitat quality, connectivity, and prioritization at the landscape scale
title_sort wolverine habitat quality, connectivity, and prioritization at the landscape scale
publisher Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Letters & Science
publishDate 2019
url https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/16379
genre Gulo gulo
wolverine
genre_facet Gulo gulo
wolverine
op_relation https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/16379
op_rights Copyright 2019 by Kathleen Anne Carroll
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