Does wolf presence reduce moose browsing intensity in young forest plantations?

Large carnivores can be a key factor in shaping their ungulate prey's behavior, which may affect lower trophic levels. While most studies on trade-offs between food acquisition and risk avoidance by ungulate prey species have been conducted in areas with limited human impact, carnivores are now...

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Published in:Ecography
Main Authors: van Beeck Calkoen, Suzanne T.S., Kuijper, Dries P.J., Sand, Håkan, Singh, Navinder J., van Wieren, Sip E., Cromsigt, Joris P.G.M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/does-wolf-presence-reduce-moose-browsing-intensity-in-young-fores
https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.03329
id ftunivwagenin:oai:library.wur.nl:wurpubs/539264
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivwagenin:oai:library.wur.nl:wurpubs/539264 2024-04-28T07:53:53+00:00 Does wolf presence reduce moose browsing intensity in young forest plantations? van Beeck Calkoen, Suzanne T.S. Kuijper, Dries P.J. Sand, Håkan Singh, Navinder J. van Wieren, Sip E. Cromsigt, Joris P.G.M. 2018 application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/does-wolf-presence-reduce-moose-browsing-intensity-in-young-fores https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.03329 en eng https://edepot.wur.nl/455907 https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/does-wolf-presence-reduce-moose-browsing-intensity-in-young-fores doi:10.1111/ecog.03329 Wageningen University & Research Ecography 41 (2018) 11 ISSN: 0906-7590 Anthropogenic landscapes Behaviorally-mediated trophic cascades Wolf-ungulate interactions Article/Letter to editor 2018 ftunivwagenin https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.03329 2024-04-03T15:20:23Z Large carnivores can be a key factor in shaping their ungulate prey's behavior, which may affect lower trophic levels. While most studies on trade-offs between food acquisition and risk avoidance by ungulate prey species have been conducted in areas with limited human impact, carnivores are now increasingly returning to highly anthropogenic landscapes. Many of these landscapes are dominated by forestry, and ungulate-forestry conflicts are an increasing issue. The aim of this study was to test if the indirect effects of a re-colonizing large predator, the wolf Canis lupus, results in a change in browsing intensity by moose Alces alces in young forest plantations in a boreal forest in Sweden. We selected 24 different forest plantations, with 12 located in low-wolf and 12 in high-wolf utilization areas. In each plantation, we measured browsing intensity, tree height, tree density, distance to the closest forest edge and we counted the number of moose pellet groups. In contrast to our predictions, wolf utilization was not the main driver of moose browsing patterns. Instead, moose browsing intensity declined with tree density and height. Separate analyses on the main tree species showed that wolf utilization had an influence, but browsing intensity was in fact higher in the high-wolf utilization areas for three out of five tree species. This pattern seemed to be driven by a strong confounding relationship between wolf utilization, tree density and height, which were both lower in the high-wolf utilization areas. We argue that this confounding effect is due to wolves being pushed towards the less productive parts of the landscape away from human activity centers. Therefore, we concluded that in order to better understand carnivore driven risk-mediated effects on herbivore behavior in anthropogenic landscapes we need to better understand the complexity of human-carnivore-prey-ecosystem interactions. Ecography Article in Journal/Newspaper Alces alces Canis lupus Wageningen UR (University & Research Centre): Digital Library Ecography 41 11 1776 1787
institution Open Polar
collection Wageningen UR (University & Research Centre): Digital Library
op_collection_id ftunivwagenin
language English
topic Anthropogenic landscapes
Behaviorally-mediated trophic cascades
Wolf-ungulate interactions
spellingShingle Anthropogenic landscapes
Behaviorally-mediated trophic cascades
Wolf-ungulate interactions
van Beeck Calkoen, Suzanne T.S.
Kuijper, Dries P.J.
Sand, Håkan
Singh, Navinder J.
van Wieren, Sip E.
Cromsigt, Joris P.G.M.
Does wolf presence reduce moose browsing intensity in young forest plantations?
topic_facet Anthropogenic landscapes
Behaviorally-mediated trophic cascades
Wolf-ungulate interactions
description Large carnivores can be a key factor in shaping their ungulate prey's behavior, which may affect lower trophic levels. While most studies on trade-offs between food acquisition and risk avoidance by ungulate prey species have been conducted in areas with limited human impact, carnivores are now increasingly returning to highly anthropogenic landscapes. Many of these landscapes are dominated by forestry, and ungulate-forestry conflicts are an increasing issue. The aim of this study was to test if the indirect effects of a re-colonizing large predator, the wolf Canis lupus, results in a change in browsing intensity by moose Alces alces in young forest plantations in a boreal forest in Sweden. We selected 24 different forest plantations, with 12 located in low-wolf and 12 in high-wolf utilization areas. In each plantation, we measured browsing intensity, tree height, tree density, distance to the closest forest edge and we counted the number of moose pellet groups. In contrast to our predictions, wolf utilization was not the main driver of moose browsing patterns. Instead, moose browsing intensity declined with tree density and height. Separate analyses on the main tree species showed that wolf utilization had an influence, but browsing intensity was in fact higher in the high-wolf utilization areas for three out of five tree species. This pattern seemed to be driven by a strong confounding relationship between wolf utilization, tree density and height, which were both lower in the high-wolf utilization areas. We argue that this confounding effect is due to wolves being pushed towards the less productive parts of the landscape away from human activity centers. Therefore, we concluded that in order to better understand carnivore driven risk-mediated effects on herbivore behavior in anthropogenic landscapes we need to better understand the complexity of human-carnivore-prey-ecosystem interactions. Ecography
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author van Beeck Calkoen, Suzanne T.S.
Kuijper, Dries P.J.
Sand, Håkan
Singh, Navinder J.
van Wieren, Sip E.
Cromsigt, Joris P.G.M.
author_facet van Beeck Calkoen, Suzanne T.S.
Kuijper, Dries P.J.
Sand, Håkan
Singh, Navinder J.
van Wieren, Sip E.
Cromsigt, Joris P.G.M.
author_sort van Beeck Calkoen, Suzanne T.S.
title Does wolf presence reduce moose browsing intensity in young forest plantations?
title_short Does wolf presence reduce moose browsing intensity in young forest plantations?
title_full Does wolf presence reduce moose browsing intensity in young forest plantations?
title_fullStr Does wolf presence reduce moose browsing intensity in young forest plantations?
title_full_unstemmed Does wolf presence reduce moose browsing intensity in young forest plantations?
title_sort does wolf presence reduce moose browsing intensity in young forest plantations?
publishDate 2018
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/does-wolf-presence-reduce-moose-browsing-intensity-in-young-fores
https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.03329
genre Alces alces
Canis lupus
genre_facet Alces alces
Canis lupus
op_source Ecography 41 (2018) 11
ISSN: 0906-7590
op_relation https://edepot.wur.nl/455907
https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/does-wolf-presence-reduce-moose-browsing-intensity-in-young-fores
doi:10.1111/ecog.03329
op_rights Wageningen University & Research
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.03329
container_title Ecography
container_volume 41
container_issue 11
container_start_page 1776
op_container_end_page 1787
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