Canada Lynx in the Great Lakes Region: Annual Report to USDA Forest Service and MN Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit

In this report we summarize accomplishments of the Canada Lynx Ecology in the Great Lakes Region project. We carried out initial work in the Superior National Forest to address 4 major questions about this Canada lynx population: distribution, abundance, persistence, and habitat requirements. In the...

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Main Authors: Moen, Ronald, Niemi, Gerald J, Burdett, Christopher L., Mech, L. David
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota Duluth 2004
Subjects:
UMD
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11299/187283
id ftunivminnesdc:oai:conservancy.umn.edu:11299/187283
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivminnesdc:oai:conservancy.umn.edu:11299/187283 2023-05-15T18:44:15+02:00 Canada Lynx in the Great Lakes Region: Annual Report to USDA Forest Service and MN Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit Natural Resources Research Institute Technical Report Moen, Ronald Niemi, Gerald J Burdett, Christopher L. Mech, L. David 2004 http://hdl.handle.net/11299/187283 en eng University of Minnesota Duluth NRRI Technical Report;NRRI/TR-04-01 http://hdl.handle.net/11299/187283 Canada lynx Great Lakes region Snowshoe hare Red squirrel Natural Resources Research Institute NRRI University of Minnesota Duluth UMD Technical Report 2004 ftunivminnesdc 2022-08-07T09:20:07Z In this report we summarize accomplishments of the Canada Lynx Ecology in the Great Lakes Region project. We carried out initial work in the Superior National Forest to address 4 major questions about this Canada lynx population: distribution, abundance, persistence, and habitat requirements. In the first 8 months of this project we have captured and deployed radiotelemetry collars on 8 Canada lynx. Each animal was relocated approximately weekly after being collared. Of the 8 Canada lynx that have been collared, 2 have died. Two of the collars deployed on Canada lynx were GPS collars. This marked the first time ever that a GPS collar was deployed on Canada lynx. We downloaded the locations from one of these GPS collars when one of the collared animals was recaptured on December 30th, 2003 after wearing the GPS collar for 3 weeks. The importance of GPS collar data for understanding movements and habitat use of Canada lynx should not be underestimated. In addition to the telemetry research, we have also conducted the first year of surveys for the major prey species of Canada lynx: snowshoe hare and red squirrel. Permanent pellet plots were established throughout the SNF for snowshoe hare. Plots were distributed based on stratified random, systematic, and selective site selection strategies. We established new plots to estimate red squirrel abundance in an area of known high lynx density, and also utilized an existing long-term data set for red squirrel abundance from SNF. Another year of surveys following the National Lynx Survey protocol was completed, and a snow-track survey for Canada lynx and other mesocarnivores was completed on the National Lynx Survey grid. There were also many opportunities to disseminate information on Canada lynx to the biological community and to the general public. More than 10 presentations on lynx biology were given by project personnel. Project personnel assisted in planning, helped with field trips, and gave presentations at the National Lynx and Wolverine Steering Committee ... Report wolverine Lynx University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy
op_collection_id ftunivminnesdc
language English
topic Canada lynx
Great Lakes region
Snowshoe hare
Red squirrel
Natural Resources Research Institute
NRRI
University of Minnesota Duluth
UMD
spellingShingle Canada lynx
Great Lakes region
Snowshoe hare
Red squirrel
Natural Resources Research Institute
NRRI
University of Minnesota Duluth
UMD
Moen, Ronald
Niemi, Gerald J
Burdett, Christopher L.
Mech, L. David
Canada Lynx in the Great Lakes Region: Annual Report to USDA Forest Service and MN Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
topic_facet Canada lynx
Great Lakes region
Snowshoe hare
Red squirrel
Natural Resources Research Institute
NRRI
University of Minnesota Duluth
UMD
description In this report we summarize accomplishments of the Canada Lynx Ecology in the Great Lakes Region project. We carried out initial work in the Superior National Forest to address 4 major questions about this Canada lynx population: distribution, abundance, persistence, and habitat requirements. In the first 8 months of this project we have captured and deployed radiotelemetry collars on 8 Canada lynx. Each animal was relocated approximately weekly after being collared. Of the 8 Canada lynx that have been collared, 2 have died. Two of the collars deployed on Canada lynx were GPS collars. This marked the first time ever that a GPS collar was deployed on Canada lynx. We downloaded the locations from one of these GPS collars when one of the collared animals was recaptured on December 30th, 2003 after wearing the GPS collar for 3 weeks. The importance of GPS collar data for understanding movements and habitat use of Canada lynx should not be underestimated. In addition to the telemetry research, we have also conducted the first year of surveys for the major prey species of Canada lynx: snowshoe hare and red squirrel. Permanent pellet plots were established throughout the SNF for snowshoe hare. Plots were distributed based on stratified random, systematic, and selective site selection strategies. We established new plots to estimate red squirrel abundance in an area of known high lynx density, and also utilized an existing long-term data set for red squirrel abundance from SNF. Another year of surveys following the National Lynx Survey protocol was completed, and a snow-track survey for Canada lynx and other mesocarnivores was completed on the National Lynx Survey grid. There were also many opportunities to disseminate information on Canada lynx to the biological community and to the general public. More than 10 presentations on lynx biology were given by project personnel. Project personnel assisted in planning, helped with field trips, and gave presentations at the National Lynx and Wolverine Steering Committee ...
format Report
author Moen, Ronald
Niemi, Gerald J
Burdett, Christopher L.
Mech, L. David
author_facet Moen, Ronald
Niemi, Gerald J
Burdett, Christopher L.
Mech, L. David
author_sort Moen, Ronald
title Canada Lynx in the Great Lakes Region: Annual Report to USDA Forest Service and MN Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
title_short Canada Lynx in the Great Lakes Region: Annual Report to USDA Forest Service and MN Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
title_full Canada Lynx in the Great Lakes Region: Annual Report to USDA Forest Service and MN Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
title_fullStr Canada Lynx in the Great Lakes Region: Annual Report to USDA Forest Service and MN Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
title_full_unstemmed Canada Lynx in the Great Lakes Region: Annual Report to USDA Forest Service and MN Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
title_sort canada lynx in the great lakes region: annual report to usda forest service and mn cooperative fish and wildlife research unit
publisher University of Minnesota Duluth
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/11299/187283
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre wolverine
Lynx
genre_facet wolverine
Lynx
op_relation NRRI Technical Report;NRRI/TR-04-01
http://hdl.handle.net/11299/187283
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