Woodland caribou persistence and extirpation in relic populations on Lake Superior

Extended: The hypothesis was proposed that woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) in North America had declined due to wolf predation and over-hunting rather than from a shortage of winter lichens (Bergerud, 1974). In 1974, two study areas were selected for testing: for the lichen hypothesis,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Rangifer
Main Authors: Bergerud, Arthur T., Dalton, W. J., Butler, H., Camps, L., Ferguson, R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Septentrio Academic Publishing 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/321
https://doi.org/10.7557/2.27.4.321
_version_ 1826765901907623936
author Bergerud, Arthur T.
Dalton, W. J.
Butler, H.
Camps, L.
Ferguson, R.
author_facet Bergerud, Arthur T.
Dalton, W. J.
Butler, H.
Camps, L.
Ferguson, R.
author_sort Bergerud, Arthur T.
collection University of Tromsø: Septentrio Academic Publishing
container_issue 4
container_start_page 57
container_title Rangifer
container_volume 27
description Extended: The hypothesis was proposed that woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) in North America had declined due to wolf predation and over-hunting rather than from a shortage of winter lichens (Bergerud, 1974). In 1974, two study areas were selected for testing: for the lichen hypothesis, we selected the Slate Islands in Lake Superior (36 km2), a closed canopy forest without terrestrial lichens, wolves, bears, or moose; for the predation hypothesis, we selected the nearby Pukaskwa National Park (PNP) where terrestrial lichens, wolves, bears, and moose were present. Both areas were monitored from 1974 to 2003 (30 years). The living and dead caribou on the Slates were estimated by the ‘King census’ strip transect (mean length 108±9.3 km, extremes 22-190, total 3026 km) and the Lincoln Index (mean tagged 45±3.6, extremes 15-78). The mean annual population on the Slate Islands based on the strip transects was 262±22 animals (extremes 104-606), or 7.3/km2 (29 years) and from the Lincoln Index 303±64 (extremes 181-482), or 8.4/km2 (23 years). These are the highest densities in North America and have persisted at least since 1949 (56 years). Mountain maple (Acer spicatum) interacted with caribou density creating a record in its age structure which corroborates persistence at relatively high density from c. 1930. The mean percentage of calves was 14.8±0.34% (20 years) in the fall and 14.1±1.95% (19 years) in late winter. The Slate Islands herd was regulated by the density dependent abundance of summer green foods and fall physical condition rather than density independent arboreal lichen availability and snow depths. Two wolves (1 wolf/150 caribou) crossed to the islands in 1993-94 and reduced two calf cohorts (3 and 4.9 per cent calves) while female adult survival declined from a mean of 82% to 71% and the population declined ≈100 animals. In PNP, caribou/moose/wolf populations were estimated by aerial surveys (in some years assisted by telemetry). The caribou population estimates ranged from 31 in 1979 to 9 ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Rangifer
Rangifer tarandus
genre_facet Rangifer
Rangifer tarandus
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
id ftunitroemsoe:oai:ojs.henry.ub.uit.no:article/321
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftunitroemsoe
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7557/2.27.4.321
op_relation https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/321/315
https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/321
doi:10.7557/2.27.4.321
op_rights Copyright (c) 2015 Arthur T. Bergerud, W. J. Dalton, H. Butler, L. Camps, R. Ferguson
op_source Rangifer; Vol. 27 No. 4: Special Issue No.17 (2007); 57-78
1890-6729
publishDate 2007
publisher Septentrio Academic Publishing
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunitroemsoe:oai:ojs.henry.ub.uit.no:article/321 2025-03-16T15:33:13+00:00 Woodland caribou persistence and extirpation in relic populations on Lake Superior Bergerud, Arthur T. Dalton, W. J. Butler, H. Camps, L. Ferguson, R. 2007-04-01 application/pdf https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/321 https://doi.org/10.7557/2.27.4.321 eng eng Septentrio Academic Publishing https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/321/315 https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/321 doi:10.7557/2.27.4.321 Copyright (c) 2015 Arthur T. Bergerud, W. J. Dalton, H. Butler, L. Camps, R. Ferguson Rangifer; Vol. 27 No. 4: Special Issue No.17 (2007); 57-78 1890-6729 alternate prey Canada caribou escape habitat forage abundance habitat island biogeography moose mountain maple Ontario optimal foraging population regulation Pukaskwa National Park refuge habitat Slate Island wolf info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2007 ftunitroemsoe https://doi.org/10.7557/2.27.4.321 2025-02-17T01:25:41Z Extended: The hypothesis was proposed that woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) in North America had declined due to wolf predation and over-hunting rather than from a shortage of winter lichens (Bergerud, 1974). In 1974, two study areas were selected for testing: for the lichen hypothesis, we selected the Slate Islands in Lake Superior (36 km2), a closed canopy forest without terrestrial lichens, wolves, bears, or moose; for the predation hypothesis, we selected the nearby Pukaskwa National Park (PNP) where terrestrial lichens, wolves, bears, and moose were present. Both areas were monitored from 1974 to 2003 (30 years). The living and dead caribou on the Slates were estimated by the ‘King census’ strip transect (mean length 108±9.3 km, extremes 22-190, total 3026 km) and the Lincoln Index (mean tagged 45±3.6, extremes 15-78). The mean annual population on the Slate Islands based on the strip transects was 262±22 animals (extremes 104-606), or 7.3/km2 (29 years) and from the Lincoln Index 303±64 (extremes 181-482), or 8.4/km2 (23 years). These are the highest densities in North America and have persisted at least since 1949 (56 years). Mountain maple (Acer spicatum) interacted with caribou density creating a record in its age structure which corroborates persistence at relatively high density from c. 1930. The mean percentage of calves was 14.8±0.34% (20 years) in the fall and 14.1±1.95% (19 years) in late winter. The Slate Islands herd was regulated by the density dependent abundance of summer green foods and fall physical condition rather than density independent arboreal lichen availability and snow depths. Two wolves (1 wolf/150 caribou) crossed to the islands in 1993-94 and reduced two calf cohorts (3 and 4.9 per cent calves) while female adult survival declined from a mean of 82% to 71% and the population declined ≈100 animals. In PNP, caribou/moose/wolf populations were estimated by aerial surveys (in some years assisted by telemetry). The caribou population estimates ranged from 31 in 1979 to 9 ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Rangifer Rangifer tarandus University of Tromsø: Septentrio Academic Publishing Canada Rangifer 27 4 57
spellingShingle alternate prey
Canada
caribou
escape habitat
forage abundance
habitat
island biogeography
moose
mountain maple
Ontario
optimal foraging
population regulation
Pukaskwa National Park
refuge habitat
Slate Island
wolf
Bergerud, Arthur T.
Dalton, W. J.
Butler, H.
Camps, L.
Ferguson, R.
Woodland caribou persistence and extirpation in relic populations on Lake Superior
title Woodland caribou persistence and extirpation in relic populations on Lake Superior
title_full Woodland caribou persistence and extirpation in relic populations on Lake Superior
title_fullStr Woodland caribou persistence and extirpation in relic populations on Lake Superior
title_full_unstemmed Woodland caribou persistence and extirpation in relic populations on Lake Superior
title_short Woodland caribou persistence and extirpation in relic populations on Lake Superior
title_sort woodland caribou persistence and extirpation in relic populations on lake superior
topic alternate prey
Canada
caribou
escape habitat
forage abundance
habitat
island biogeography
moose
mountain maple
Ontario
optimal foraging
population regulation
Pukaskwa National Park
refuge habitat
Slate Island
wolf
topic_facet alternate prey
Canada
caribou
escape habitat
forage abundance
habitat
island biogeography
moose
mountain maple
Ontario
optimal foraging
population regulation
Pukaskwa National Park
refuge habitat
Slate Island
wolf
url https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/321
https://doi.org/10.7557/2.27.4.321