Determinants of winter kill rates of wolves in Scandinavia

Winter wolf (Canis lupus) kill rates on moose (Alces alces) on the Scandinavian Peninsula are high and subject to strong variation, compared to other boreal wolf-moose systems. A more detailed understanding of factors influencing this variation is crucial for management and conservation of the Scand...

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Main Author: Colombo, Mattia
Format: Text
Language:Swedish
English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/6004/7/colombo_m_130903.pdf
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spelling ftsluppsalast:oai:stud.epsilon.slu.se:6004 2023-05-15T13:13:41+02:00 Determinants of winter kill rates of wolves in Scandinavia Colombo, Mattia 2013-09-01 application/pdf https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/6004/7/colombo_m_130903.pdf sv eng swe eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/6004/ urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-s-2681 https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/6004/7/colombo_m_130903.pdf Colombo, Mattia, 2013. Determinants of winter kill rates of wolves in Scandinavia. Second cycle, A2E. Umeå: (S) > Dept. of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/OID-251.html> Forestry - General aspects Animal ecology Second cycle, A2E NonPeerReviewed 2013 ftsluppsalast 2022-09-10T18:09:44Z Winter wolf (Canis lupus) kill rates on moose (Alces alces) on the Scandinavian Peninsula are high and subject to strong variation, compared to other boreal wolf-moose systems. A more detailed understanding of factors influencing this variation is crucial for management and conservation of the Scandinavian wolf population. Although functional response models explain the relationship between prey density and kill rates, few studies quantify and investigate the predator-prey characteristics shaping the mechanisms of predation at a finer scale. I analysed 18 605 hourly GPS locations from 13 wolf packs during 2001-2010. There were 182 usable moose predation events from 17 winter study periods during this time span. With the GPS data I assessed patterns of wolf activity detecting consecutive killsites and reconstructing wolf hunting paths between predation events. I estimated two components of kill rate i.e., searching time (Ts) which is the time spent to detect, chase, and kill prey, and handling time (Th), i.e., the time used to consume and process the prey for each predation event. I tested the difference between two different methods used for defining spatial criteria and evaluated a set of models to test factors potentially affecting Ts and Th. These factors included prey age, pack size, winter period, moose density, and wolf density at two functional levels of scale. I demonstrate that the method used for defining Ts and Th influenced their estimates and model selection. The majority of moose kills occurred during night time and wolves spent 75% of their total time away (>1km) from kill-sites. Wolf search time decreased with an increase in local moose density and pack size. At the pack level, Th increased with pack size and decreased with the number of neighbouring packs highlighting the influence of territoriality and social interactions among wolf packs. Age of moose, i.e., calf (< 1 year), yearling (1 year) and adult (> 2 year) moose, was an important variable for explaining variation in both Ts and ... Text Alces alces Canis lupus Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences: Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
institution Open Polar
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences: Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
op_collection_id ftsluppsalast
language Swedish
English
topic Forestry - General aspects
Animal ecology
spellingShingle Forestry - General aspects
Animal ecology
Colombo, Mattia
Determinants of winter kill rates of wolves in Scandinavia
topic_facet Forestry - General aspects
Animal ecology
description Winter wolf (Canis lupus) kill rates on moose (Alces alces) on the Scandinavian Peninsula are high and subject to strong variation, compared to other boreal wolf-moose systems. A more detailed understanding of factors influencing this variation is crucial for management and conservation of the Scandinavian wolf population. Although functional response models explain the relationship between prey density and kill rates, few studies quantify and investigate the predator-prey characteristics shaping the mechanisms of predation at a finer scale. I analysed 18 605 hourly GPS locations from 13 wolf packs during 2001-2010. There were 182 usable moose predation events from 17 winter study periods during this time span. With the GPS data I assessed patterns of wolf activity detecting consecutive killsites and reconstructing wolf hunting paths between predation events. I estimated two components of kill rate i.e., searching time (Ts) which is the time spent to detect, chase, and kill prey, and handling time (Th), i.e., the time used to consume and process the prey for each predation event. I tested the difference between two different methods used for defining spatial criteria and evaluated a set of models to test factors potentially affecting Ts and Th. These factors included prey age, pack size, winter period, moose density, and wolf density at two functional levels of scale. I demonstrate that the method used for defining Ts and Th influenced their estimates and model selection. The majority of moose kills occurred during night time and wolves spent 75% of their total time away (>1km) from kill-sites. Wolf search time decreased with an increase in local moose density and pack size. At the pack level, Th increased with pack size and decreased with the number of neighbouring packs highlighting the influence of territoriality and social interactions among wolf packs. Age of moose, i.e., calf (< 1 year), yearling (1 year) and adult (> 2 year) moose, was an important variable for explaining variation in both Ts and ...
format Text
author Colombo, Mattia
author_facet Colombo, Mattia
author_sort Colombo, Mattia
title Determinants of winter kill rates of wolves in Scandinavia
title_short Determinants of winter kill rates of wolves in Scandinavia
title_full Determinants of winter kill rates of wolves in Scandinavia
title_fullStr Determinants of winter kill rates of wolves in Scandinavia
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of winter kill rates of wolves in Scandinavia
title_sort determinants of winter kill rates of wolves in scandinavia
publishDate 2013
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/6004/7/colombo_m_130903.pdf
genre Alces alces
Canis lupus
genre_facet Alces alces
Canis lupus
op_relation https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/6004/
urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-s-2681
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/6004/7/colombo_m_130903.pdf
Colombo, Mattia, 2013. Determinants of winter kill rates of wolves in Scandinavia. Second cycle, A2E. Umeå: (S) > Dept. of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/OID-251.html>
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