Determining the Vulnerability of Wolves to Harvest

Individual behaviors are influenced by environmental, genetic, and demographic factors. Some animals choose to live in groups and cooperatively breed, and their behaviors can change depending on dynamic factors such as group size and composition that affect group persistence. Extensive research on c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rebholz, Peter
Other Authors: Ausband, David
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digital.lib.uidaho.edu/cdm/ref/collection/etd/id/2081
Description
Summary:Individual behaviors are influenced by environmental, genetic, and demographic factors. Some animals choose to live in groups and cooperatively breed, and their behaviors can change depending on dynamic factors such as group size and composition that affect group persistence. Extensive research on cooperative breeding species has shown that the lethal removal of breeders from a group has direct and indirect effects on the persistence of the group. In Idaho, USA, gray wolves (Canis lupus) are harvested annually, this has provided an opportunity to investigate the effects of harvest on a population of cooperative breeders. These annual hunting and trapping seasons overlap with the dispersal and breeding periods for wolves. Currently, we know little about how many breeders, dispersing aged adults (>22 months), yearlings, and pups are harvested each year via hunting and trapping or when they are harvested each season.In the first chapter, we applied 10 years of genetic and metadata collected from harvested wolves to investigate how behaviors and ecological drivers might influence the vulnerability of wolves throughout the harvest season. We created pedigrees from non-invasive genetic scat sampling to create expected proportions of three different age classes (pup, yearling, and sexually mature or >22 months old) of wolves and compared them to the observed number of those cohorts harvested during ecologically significant periods (i.e., dispersal and breeding). We found that pups are more vulnerable to harvest in December when wolf harvest transitions largely to trapping (66%). We compared the expected and observed proportions of wolves ≥2 years old during peak dispersal season (December) and breeding season (January – February) as well as yearlings from September to October when the group moves out of rendezvous sites and found no overall trend. However, there was considerable annual variation suggesting there is more to learn about how the vulnerability of different sex and age classes of cooperative breeders ...