Supplementary material S2 : GPS collars have an apparent positive effect on the survival of a large carnivore

Are instrumented animals representative of the population, given the potential bias caused by selective sampling and the influence of capture, handling and wearing bio-loggers? The answer is elusive due to the challenges of obtaining comparable data from individuals with and without bio-loggers. Usi...

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Main Authors: Cyril Milleret (10979114), Richard Bischof (2908070), Pierre Dupont (469489), Henrik Brøseth (3274410), John Odden (432630), Jenny Mattisson (676043)
Format: Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.14790455.v1
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spelling ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/14790455 2023-05-15T16:32:19+02:00 Supplementary material S2 : GPS collars have an apparent positive effect on the survival of a large carnivore Cyril Milleret (10979114) Richard Bischof (2908070) Pierre Dupont (469489) Henrik Brøseth (3274410) John Odden (432630) Jenny Mattisson (676043) 2021-06-16T09:50:34Z https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.14790455.v1 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Supplementary_material_S2_GPS_collars_have_an_apparent_positive_effect_on_the_survival_of_a_large_carnivore/14790455 doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.14790455.v1 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Ecology population level representativeness population dynamics Text Journal contribution 2021 ftsmithonian https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.14790455.v1 2021-07-01T09:43:08Z Are instrumented animals representative of the population, given the potential bias caused by selective sampling and the influence of capture, handling and wearing bio-loggers? The answer is elusive due to the challenges of obtaining comparable data from individuals with and without bio-loggers. Using non-invasive genetic data of a large carnivore, the wolverine ( Gulo gulo ) in Scandinavia and an open-population spatial capture–recapture model, we found a 16 (credible interval: 4–30) percentage points lower mortality probability for GPS-collared individuals compared to individuals without GPS collars. While the risk of dying from legal culling was comparable for collared and non-collared wolverines, the former experienced lower mortality probabilities due to causes other than legal culling. The aforementioned effect was pronounced despite a potentially lower age, and, therefore, likely higher natural mortality, of collared individuals. Reports of positive effects of bio-loggers on the survival of individuals are uncommon and we argue that GPS collars could shield animals from poaching. Our results highlight the challenges of drawing population-level inferences for populations subjected to poaching when using data from instrumented individuals. Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper Gulo gulo Unknown
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftsmithonian
language unknown
topic Ecology
population level
representativeness
population dynamics
spellingShingle Ecology
population level
representativeness
population dynamics
Cyril Milleret (10979114)
Richard Bischof (2908070)
Pierre Dupont (469489)
Henrik Brøseth (3274410)
John Odden (432630)
Jenny Mattisson (676043)
Supplementary material S2 : GPS collars have an apparent positive effect on the survival of a large carnivore
topic_facet Ecology
population level
representativeness
population dynamics
description Are instrumented animals representative of the population, given the potential bias caused by selective sampling and the influence of capture, handling and wearing bio-loggers? The answer is elusive due to the challenges of obtaining comparable data from individuals with and without bio-loggers. Using non-invasive genetic data of a large carnivore, the wolverine ( Gulo gulo ) in Scandinavia and an open-population spatial capture–recapture model, we found a 16 (credible interval: 4–30) percentage points lower mortality probability for GPS-collared individuals compared to individuals without GPS collars. While the risk of dying from legal culling was comparable for collared and non-collared wolverines, the former experienced lower mortality probabilities due to causes other than legal culling. The aforementioned effect was pronounced despite a potentially lower age, and, therefore, likely higher natural mortality, of collared individuals. Reports of positive effects of bio-loggers on the survival of individuals are uncommon and we argue that GPS collars could shield animals from poaching. Our results highlight the challenges of drawing population-level inferences for populations subjected to poaching when using data from instrumented individuals.
format Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
author Cyril Milleret (10979114)
Richard Bischof (2908070)
Pierre Dupont (469489)
Henrik Brøseth (3274410)
John Odden (432630)
Jenny Mattisson (676043)
author_facet Cyril Milleret (10979114)
Richard Bischof (2908070)
Pierre Dupont (469489)
Henrik Brøseth (3274410)
John Odden (432630)
Jenny Mattisson (676043)
author_sort Cyril Milleret (10979114)
title Supplementary material S2 : GPS collars have an apparent positive effect on the survival of a large carnivore
title_short Supplementary material S2 : GPS collars have an apparent positive effect on the survival of a large carnivore
title_full Supplementary material S2 : GPS collars have an apparent positive effect on the survival of a large carnivore
title_fullStr Supplementary material S2 : GPS collars have an apparent positive effect on the survival of a large carnivore
title_full_unstemmed Supplementary material S2 : GPS collars have an apparent positive effect on the survival of a large carnivore
title_sort supplementary material s2 : gps collars have an apparent positive effect on the survival of a large carnivore
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.14790455.v1
genre Gulo gulo
genre_facet Gulo gulo
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Supplementary_material_S2_GPS_collars_have_an_apparent_positive_effect_on_the_survival_of_a_large_carnivore/14790455
doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.14790455.v1
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.14790455.v1
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