Harvest and Persistence of Wolf Populations: Variable Effects of Harvest on Wolf Packs in the Rocky Mountains

Pubic harvest is a common method used to manage populations of wolves (Canis lupus) in North America. Although wolves appear resilient to the effects of harvest management the influences on demography and pack stability are uncertain. Packs generally drive population dynamics for wolves; thus, we we...

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Main Author: Bassing, Sarah B.
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: University of Montana 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/10980
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/etd/article/11997/viewcontent/Bassing_Sarah_Thesis.pdf
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spelling ftunivmontana:oai:scholarworks.umt.edu:etd-11997 2023-07-16T03:57:54+02:00 Harvest and Persistence of Wolf Populations: Variable Effects of Harvest on Wolf Packs in the Rocky Mountains Bassing, Sarah B. 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/10980 https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/etd/article/11997/viewcontent/Bassing_Sarah_Thesis.pdf unknown University of Montana https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/10980 https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/etd/article/11997/viewcontent/Bassing_Sarah_Thesis.pdf Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Canis lupus harvest immigration noninvasive genetic surveys occupancy wolves Population Biology thesis 2017 ftunivmontana 2023-06-27T23:02:08Z Pubic harvest is a common method used to manage populations of wolves (Canis lupus) in North America. Although wolves appear resilient to the effects of harvest management the influences on demography and pack stability are uncertain. Packs generally drive population dynamics for wolves; thus, we were interested in how harvested populations were maintained and how harvest influenced the abundance and distribution of packs. We used noninvasive genetic data collected in Idaho, USA (2008–2014) and Alberta, Canada (2012–2014) to test whether immigration compensated for harvest mortality and helped maintain population densities. We further fit occupancy models to detection data derived from noninvasive genetic samples and hunter surveys from Alberta, Canada (2012–2014) to test the stability of pack abundance and distribution in a harvested population of wolves. We genetically identified 461 unique wolves across our study areas; 762 hunters reported seeing live wolves in southwestern Alberta. We found our hypothesis that immigration did not compensate for harvest mortality was supported. Density of wolves in the U.S. population declined from 15.49 wolves/1000 km2 (95% credible interval [CRI]: 12.38–18.57) without harvest to 10.20 wolves/1000 km2 (95% CRI: 7.47–12.90) with harvest, whereas the proportion of long-distance immigrants was low and did not change with harvest (ranged 0.01–0.02, SD = 0.1). Density and proportion of immigrants were similar among study areas where harvest occurred. We also found we could not reject our hypothesis that occurrence of packs was generally stable in a harvested population of wolves. The mean annual probability for wolf pack occupancy ranged 0.72–0.74 and the estimated distribution of wolf packs was consistent over time. Model selection indicated harvest did not have a strong effect on pack occurrence but that the probability of detecting a wolf pack was positively associated with the intensity of harvest for wolves. Although immigration did not appear to compensate for harvest ... Thesis Canis lupus University of Montana: ScholarWorks Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Montana: ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftunivmontana
language unknown
topic Canis lupus
harvest
immigration
noninvasive genetic surveys
occupancy
wolves
Population Biology
spellingShingle Canis lupus
harvest
immigration
noninvasive genetic surveys
occupancy
wolves
Population Biology
Bassing, Sarah B.
Harvest and Persistence of Wolf Populations: Variable Effects of Harvest on Wolf Packs in the Rocky Mountains
topic_facet Canis lupus
harvest
immigration
noninvasive genetic surveys
occupancy
wolves
Population Biology
description Pubic harvest is a common method used to manage populations of wolves (Canis lupus) in North America. Although wolves appear resilient to the effects of harvest management the influences on demography and pack stability are uncertain. Packs generally drive population dynamics for wolves; thus, we were interested in how harvested populations were maintained and how harvest influenced the abundance and distribution of packs. We used noninvasive genetic data collected in Idaho, USA (2008–2014) and Alberta, Canada (2012–2014) to test whether immigration compensated for harvest mortality and helped maintain population densities. We further fit occupancy models to detection data derived from noninvasive genetic samples and hunter surveys from Alberta, Canada (2012–2014) to test the stability of pack abundance and distribution in a harvested population of wolves. We genetically identified 461 unique wolves across our study areas; 762 hunters reported seeing live wolves in southwestern Alberta. We found our hypothesis that immigration did not compensate for harvest mortality was supported. Density of wolves in the U.S. population declined from 15.49 wolves/1000 km2 (95% credible interval [CRI]: 12.38–18.57) without harvest to 10.20 wolves/1000 km2 (95% CRI: 7.47–12.90) with harvest, whereas the proportion of long-distance immigrants was low and did not change with harvest (ranged 0.01–0.02, SD = 0.1). Density and proportion of immigrants were similar among study areas where harvest occurred. We also found we could not reject our hypothesis that occurrence of packs was generally stable in a harvested population of wolves. The mean annual probability for wolf pack occupancy ranged 0.72–0.74 and the estimated distribution of wolf packs was consistent over time. Model selection indicated harvest did not have a strong effect on pack occurrence but that the probability of detecting a wolf pack was positively associated with the intensity of harvest for wolves. Although immigration did not appear to compensate for harvest ...
format Thesis
author Bassing, Sarah B.
author_facet Bassing, Sarah B.
author_sort Bassing, Sarah B.
title Harvest and Persistence of Wolf Populations: Variable Effects of Harvest on Wolf Packs in the Rocky Mountains
title_short Harvest and Persistence of Wolf Populations: Variable Effects of Harvest on Wolf Packs in the Rocky Mountains
title_full Harvest and Persistence of Wolf Populations: Variable Effects of Harvest on Wolf Packs in the Rocky Mountains
title_fullStr Harvest and Persistence of Wolf Populations: Variable Effects of Harvest on Wolf Packs in the Rocky Mountains
title_full_unstemmed Harvest and Persistence of Wolf Populations: Variable Effects of Harvest on Wolf Packs in the Rocky Mountains
title_sort harvest and persistence of wolf populations: variable effects of harvest on wolf packs in the rocky mountains
publisher University of Montana
publishDate 2017
url https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/10980
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/etd/article/11997/viewcontent/Bassing_Sarah_Thesis.pdf
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_source Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
op_relation https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/10980
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/etd/article/11997/viewcontent/Bassing_Sarah_Thesis.pdf
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