Carnivore Competition: Spatial and Dietary Implications of Gray Wolf Recolonization for Cougars in Northeast Oregon

After a 40-year absence from Oregon’s landscape, expanding gray wolf (Canis lupus) populations are reestablishing elements of interspecific competition with sympatric large carnivores, like cougars (Puma concolor). This presents new challenges for management of large carnivores and their ungulate pr...

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Main Author: Orning, Elizabeth Kari
Other Authors: Dugger, Katie M., Levi, Taal, Tornquist, Susan, Jones, Julia, Nielson, Ryan, Fisheries and Wildlife
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
unknown
Published: Oregon State University
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/m900p119m
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spelling ftoregonstate:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:m900p119m 2024-09-15T18:01:26+00:00 Carnivore Competition: Spatial and Dietary Implications of Gray Wolf Recolonization for Cougars in Northeast Oregon Orning, Elizabeth Kari Dugger, Katie M. Levi, Taal Tornquist, Susan Jones, Julia Nielson, Ryan Fisheries and Wildlife https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/m900p119m English [eng] eng unknown Oregon State University https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/m900p119m All rights reserved Dissertation ftoregonstate 2024-07-22T18:06:06Z After a 40-year absence from Oregon’s landscape, expanding gray wolf (Canis lupus) populations are reestablishing elements of interspecific competition with sympatric large carnivores, like cougars (Puma concolor). This presents new challenges for management of large carnivores and their ungulate prey populations (e.g., elk, Cervus canadensis nelsoni; mule deer, Odocoileus hemionus) in these re-established multi-carnivore systems. Wolf range expansion and interactions with populations of sympatric cougars could alter predation on deer and elk populations in the Pacific Northwest. Competition could also affect the spatial distribution, demography, and population dynamics of cougars, the assumed subordinate predator in wolf-cougar interactions. However, the strength of competitive interactions dictate the trajectory of top-down effects and can be system specific. Coupled with a paucity of empirical data on cougar diets and space use across landscapes with and without wolves, prediction of subsequent effects to prey populations is challenging. Furthermore, the common assumption of additive predation effects when a missing predator is added back to an ecosystem may not be well-founded because elk populations have increased in some parts of the Pacific Northwest. My primary research objectives were to 1) estimate diet composition and kill rates for wolves in northeast Oregon, 2) estimate diet composition and kill rates for cougars and evaluate changes in cougar predation patterns across time periods with and without wolves, 3) evaluate cougar home range and kill site distribution for changes relative to pre-wolf patterns, and 4) investigate the influence of wolf presence on cougar movement patterns and habitat use in northeast Oregon. In addition to addressing key ecological questions about carnivore interactions, results from my research provide information on implications of expanded predator systems for elk and mule deer populations, and will be useful to other states and Canadian provinces in western North ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Canis lupus gray wolf ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
institution Open Polar
collection ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
op_collection_id ftoregonstate
language English
unknown
description After a 40-year absence from Oregon’s landscape, expanding gray wolf (Canis lupus) populations are reestablishing elements of interspecific competition with sympatric large carnivores, like cougars (Puma concolor). This presents new challenges for management of large carnivores and their ungulate prey populations (e.g., elk, Cervus canadensis nelsoni; mule deer, Odocoileus hemionus) in these re-established multi-carnivore systems. Wolf range expansion and interactions with populations of sympatric cougars could alter predation on deer and elk populations in the Pacific Northwest. Competition could also affect the spatial distribution, demography, and population dynamics of cougars, the assumed subordinate predator in wolf-cougar interactions. However, the strength of competitive interactions dictate the trajectory of top-down effects and can be system specific. Coupled with a paucity of empirical data on cougar diets and space use across landscapes with and without wolves, prediction of subsequent effects to prey populations is challenging. Furthermore, the common assumption of additive predation effects when a missing predator is added back to an ecosystem may not be well-founded because elk populations have increased in some parts of the Pacific Northwest. My primary research objectives were to 1) estimate diet composition and kill rates for wolves in northeast Oregon, 2) estimate diet composition and kill rates for cougars and evaluate changes in cougar predation patterns across time periods with and without wolves, 3) evaluate cougar home range and kill site distribution for changes relative to pre-wolf patterns, and 4) investigate the influence of wolf presence on cougar movement patterns and habitat use in northeast Oregon. In addition to addressing key ecological questions about carnivore interactions, results from my research provide information on implications of expanded predator systems for elk and mule deer populations, and will be useful to other states and Canadian provinces in western North ...
author2 Dugger, Katie M.
Levi, Taal
Tornquist, Susan
Jones, Julia
Nielson, Ryan
Fisheries and Wildlife
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Orning, Elizabeth Kari
spellingShingle Orning, Elizabeth Kari
Carnivore Competition: Spatial and Dietary Implications of Gray Wolf Recolonization for Cougars in Northeast Oregon
author_facet Orning, Elizabeth Kari
author_sort Orning, Elizabeth Kari
title Carnivore Competition: Spatial and Dietary Implications of Gray Wolf Recolonization for Cougars in Northeast Oregon
title_short Carnivore Competition: Spatial and Dietary Implications of Gray Wolf Recolonization for Cougars in Northeast Oregon
title_full Carnivore Competition: Spatial and Dietary Implications of Gray Wolf Recolonization for Cougars in Northeast Oregon
title_fullStr Carnivore Competition: Spatial and Dietary Implications of Gray Wolf Recolonization for Cougars in Northeast Oregon
title_full_unstemmed Carnivore Competition: Spatial and Dietary Implications of Gray Wolf Recolonization for Cougars in Northeast Oregon
title_sort carnivore competition: spatial and dietary implications of gray wolf recolonization for cougars in northeast oregon
publisher Oregon State University
url https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/m900p119m
genre Canis lupus
gray wolf
genre_facet Canis lupus
gray wolf
op_relation https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/m900p119m
op_rights All rights reserved
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