Selection of rubbing trees by brown bears in Slovakia

Chemical communication in bears is not fully understood, despite the importance of this topic for the behavioral ecology as well as for the conservation and management of Ursids. Brown bears often mark trees by rubbing on them as well as biting and clawing of the bark. Such rubbing trees are often u...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Barilla, Ján
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: University College of Southeast Norway 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2584791
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author Barilla, Ján
author_facet Barilla, Ján
author_sort Barilla, Ján
collection Universitet i Sørøst-Norge: USN Open Archive
description Chemical communication in bears is not fully understood, despite the importance of this topic for the behavioral ecology as well as for the conservation and management of Ursids. Brown bears often mark trees by rubbing on them as well as biting and clawing of the bark. Such rubbing trees are often used for the collection of hair samples for genetic analyses needed for management purposes. The aim of this study was to document rubbing trees in the eastern part of Tatra National Park, Slovakia, and to create a predictive habitat model to guide searches for rub trees in other parts of Slovakia. We created a grid system of 100 random transects in a 140km2 study area, and walked the trails and random transects in search for rub trees from March to October 2015-2017. For each rub tree we recorded its location in the landscape, the habitat type surrounding it, as well as several variables describing the tree itself. We documented 85 rub trees in the protected area Belianske Tatry. These trees were significantly more often located along trails in comparison to random transects, however, bears also seemed to prefer less human-frequented (i.e., seasonally closed) trails. Bears significantly preferred coniferous tree species: Norway spruce and European larch with a trunk diameter larger than the mean trunk diameter of trees in its vicinity. We created a predictive model for rubbing trees using Maximum Entropy modelling (MaxEnt), based on only-presence data of rub trees and 9 environmental variables. The final model are 100 replicates of MaxEnt algorithm with random seed of training samples resulted in an average training Area under curve (AUC) value of AUC value of 0.941 ± 0.012. This model could help to simplify design of genetic studies for monitoring of population and studies about rubbing behavior of brown bears in the Tatra National Park and other areas in Slovakia. But it will also provide insight in the chemical communication of bears. publishedVersion
format Master Thesis
genre Ursus arctos
genre_facet Ursus arctos
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
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institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftunivsorostnor
op_coverage Slovakia
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2584791
op_rights Copyright The Author
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publisher University College of Southeast Norway
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spelling ftunivsorostnor:oai:openarchive.usn.no:11250/2584791 2025-01-17T01:15:10+00:00 Selection of rubbing trees by brown bears in Slovakia Barilla, Ján Slovakia 2018 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2584791 eng eng University College of Southeast Norway http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2584791 Copyright The Author brown bears Ursus arctos rub tree Maximum Entropy modelling VDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Zoology and botany: 480::Ethology: 485 Master thesis 2018 ftunivsorostnor 2024-12-16T04:15:42Z Chemical communication in bears is not fully understood, despite the importance of this topic for the behavioral ecology as well as for the conservation and management of Ursids. Brown bears often mark trees by rubbing on them as well as biting and clawing of the bark. Such rubbing trees are often used for the collection of hair samples for genetic analyses needed for management purposes. The aim of this study was to document rubbing trees in the eastern part of Tatra National Park, Slovakia, and to create a predictive habitat model to guide searches for rub trees in other parts of Slovakia. We created a grid system of 100 random transects in a 140km2 study area, and walked the trails and random transects in search for rub trees from March to October 2015-2017. For each rub tree we recorded its location in the landscape, the habitat type surrounding it, as well as several variables describing the tree itself. We documented 85 rub trees in the protected area Belianske Tatry. These trees were significantly more often located along trails in comparison to random transects, however, bears also seemed to prefer less human-frequented (i.e., seasonally closed) trails. Bears significantly preferred coniferous tree species: Norway spruce and European larch with a trunk diameter larger than the mean trunk diameter of trees in its vicinity. We created a predictive model for rubbing trees using Maximum Entropy modelling (MaxEnt), based on only-presence data of rub trees and 9 environmental variables. The final model are 100 replicates of MaxEnt algorithm with random seed of training samples resulted in an average training Area under curve (AUC) value of AUC value of 0.941 ± 0.012. This model could help to simplify design of genetic studies for monitoring of population and studies about rubbing behavior of brown bears in the Tatra National Park and other areas in Slovakia. But it will also provide insight in the chemical communication of bears. publishedVersion Master Thesis Ursus arctos Universitet i Sørøst-Norge: USN Open Archive Norway
spellingShingle brown bears
Ursus arctos
rub tree
Maximum Entropy modelling
VDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Zoology and botany: 480::Ethology: 485
Barilla, Ján
Selection of rubbing trees by brown bears in Slovakia
title Selection of rubbing trees by brown bears in Slovakia
title_full Selection of rubbing trees by brown bears in Slovakia
title_fullStr Selection of rubbing trees by brown bears in Slovakia
title_full_unstemmed Selection of rubbing trees by brown bears in Slovakia
title_short Selection of rubbing trees by brown bears in Slovakia
title_sort selection of rubbing trees by brown bears in slovakia
topic brown bears
Ursus arctos
rub tree
Maximum Entropy modelling
VDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Zoology and botany: 480::Ethology: 485
topic_facet brown bears
Ursus arctos
rub tree
Maximum Entropy modelling
VDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Zoology and botany: 480::Ethology: 485
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2584791