Predicting fine-scale distributions of gray wolves: is habitat an effective surrogate for prey availability?

Field studies of gray wolf ('Canis lupus') fine-scale distribution are typically based on analyses of habitat characteristics alone. Habitat relationships have been speculated to act as a surrogate for other more directly relevant resources such as prey availability. Using global positioni...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Desy, Glenn Erwin
Other Authors: Fryxell, John
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Guelph 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10214/20627
Description
Summary:Field studies of gray wolf ('Canis lupus') fine-scale distribution are typically based on analyses of habitat characteristics alone. Habitat relationships have been speculated to act as a surrogate for other more directly relevant resources such as prey availability. Using global positioning system telemetry data from Ontario, I test whether resource selection models that include prey distribution data better predict home range use by gray wolves than habitat-based models. Resource selection functions generated for individual wolf packs across multiple seasons that incorporated prey and landscape attributes generally fit data better than those based on habitat or diet attributes alone. Future models of resource selection may need to be refined particularly for carnivores whose prey may not be adequately reflected by habitat proxies.