Location matters: an eighteen-year spatial and temporal analysis of the recolonization of a disjunct population of gray wolves (Canis lupus)

Most gray wolves in the United States live in disjunct populations. Management of isolated populations is important in sustaining the species. The Central Forest Region (CFR) of Wisconsin is home to one such disjunct population. Wolves began recolonizing the CFR in the early to mid-1990s. In this st...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Simpson, Theresa Lachance
Other Authors: Thomsen, Meredith
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/80324
id ftunivwiscon:oai:minds.wisconsin.edu:1793/80324
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivwiscon:oai:minds.wisconsin.edu:1793/80324 2024-11-03T14:54:37+00:00 Location matters: an eighteen-year spatial and temporal analysis of the recolonization of a disjunct population of gray wolves (Canis lupus) Simpson, Theresa Lachance Thomsen, Meredith 2020-06-29T14:17:06Z application/pdf http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/80324 en_US eng http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/80324 Biology Wolves Endangered species Thesis 2020 ftunivwiscon 2024-10-23T15:06:42Z Most gray wolves in the United States live in disjunct populations. Management of isolated populations is important in sustaining the species. The Central Forest Region (CFR) of Wisconsin is home to one such disjunct population. Wolves began recolonizing the CFR in the early to mid-1990s. In this study, wolf recolonization was divided into three distinct Time Periods: Early (1994-1999), Mid (2000-2005), and Late (2006-2012). Habitat Classes of individual pack territories were defined as Optimal, Mixed, and Marginal, based on features known to influence wolf habitat selection or avoidance. These were: (1) percent public land, (2) percent agriculture, and (3) road density. The influence of Time Period and Habitat Class on pack territory size, mid-winter pack size, reproductive performance, wolf-human conflicts, human-caused wolf mortalities, territory persistence and reproductive persistence were analyzed. Pack demographics were similar across Time Periods, except that pup production was slightly lower during the Mid Time Period than during Late. Marginal Habitat packs had smaller mid-winter pack sizes, fewer pups in mid-summer, increased conflicts with humans, five times greater human-caused mortalities, and lower reproductive persistence. Pack territory location matters. Results show how increasingly human-altered landscapes affect wolves’ viability and indicates the extent to which wolf recolonization may or may not be successful Thesis Canis lupus University of Wisconsin: Digital Collections
institution Open Polar
collection University of Wisconsin: Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftunivwiscon
language English
topic Biology
Wolves
Endangered species
spellingShingle Biology
Wolves
Endangered species
Simpson, Theresa Lachance
Location matters: an eighteen-year spatial and temporal analysis of the recolonization of a disjunct population of gray wolves (Canis lupus)
topic_facet Biology
Wolves
Endangered species
description Most gray wolves in the United States live in disjunct populations. Management of isolated populations is important in sustaining the species. The Central Forest Region (CFR) of Wisconsin is home to one such disjunct population. Wolves began recolonizing the CFR in the early to mid-1990s. In this study, wolf recolonization was divided into three distinct Time Periods: Early (1994-1999), Mid (2000-2005), and Late (2006-2012). Habitat Classes of individual pack territories were defined as Optimal, Mixed, and Marginal, based on features known to influence wolf habitat selection or avoidance. These were: (1) percent public land, (2) percent agriculture, and (3) road density. The influence of Time Period and Habitat Class on pack territory size, mid-winter pack size, reproductive performance, wolf-human conflicts, human-caused wolf mortalities, territory persistence and reproductive persistence were analyzed. Pack demographics were similar across Time Periods, except that pup production was slightly lower during the Mid Time Period than during Late. Marginal Habitat packs had smaller mid-winter pack sizes, fewer pups in mid-summer, increased conflicts with humans, five times greater human-caused mortalities, and lower reproductive persistence. Pack territory location matters. Results show how increasingly human-altered landscapes affect wolves’ viability and indicates the extent to which wolf recolonization may or may not be successful
author2 Thomsen, Meredith
format Thesis
author Simpson, Theresa Lachance
author_facet Simpson, Theresa Lachance
author_sort Simpson, Theresa Lachance
title Location matters: an eighteen-year spatial and temporal analysis of the recolonization of a disjunct population of gray wolves (Canis lupus)
title_short Location matters: an eighteen-year spatial and temporal analysis of the recolonization of a disjunct population of gray wolves (Canis lupus)
title_full Location matters: an eighteen-year spatial and temporal analysis of the recolonization of a disjunct population of gray wolves (Canis lupus)
title_fullStr Location matters: an eighteen-year spatial and temporal analysis of the recolonization of a disjunct population of gray wolves (Canis lupus)
title_full_unstemmed Location matters: an eighteen-year spatial and temporal analysis of the recolonization of a disjunct population of gray wolves (Canis lupus)
title_sort location matters: an eighteen-year spatial and temporal analysis of the recolonization of a disjunct population of gray wolves (canis lupus)
publishDate 2020
url http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/80324
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_relation http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/80324
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