Multiscale Resource Selection by Woodland Caribou in Saskatchewan's Boreal Shield: A Fundamental Step Towards Managing a Threatened Species

Resource selection is a dynamic behavioural process by which individuals choose resource units (e.g., pixels or points on a landscape) disproportionate to their availability in order to maximize fitness. Because it influences how individuals, and thus populations, are distributed through space and t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stewart, Kathrine Mary 1985-
Other Authors: McLoughlin, Philip D, Johnstone, Jill F, Hwang, Yeen Ten, Rettie, James, Johnson, Chris J
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: University of Saskatchewan 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/7573
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/7573 2023-05-15T15:53:28+02:00 Multiscale Resource Selection by Woodland Caribou in Saskatchewan's Boreal Shield: A Fundamental Step Towards Managing a Threatened Species Stewart, Kathrine Mary 1985- McLoughlin, Philip D Johnstone, Jill F Hwang, Yeen Ten Rettie, James Johnson, Chris J 2016-11-09T15:33:57Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10388/7573 unknown University of Saskatchewan http://hdl.handle.net/10388/7573 TC-SSU-7573 resource selection boreal woodland caribou MCMCglmm Thesis text 2016 ftusaskatchewan 2022-01-17T11:52:08Z Resource selection is a dynamic behavioural process by which individuals choose resource units (e.g., pixels or points on a landscape) disproportionate to their availability in order to maximize fitness. Because it influences how individuals, and thus populations, are distributed through space and time, understanding how animals choose resource units is fundamental to developing effective, long-term resource management and species’ conservation strategies. One of the first steps in assessing conservation prospects for a species is identifying critical habitat, which is habitat necessary for a species to carry out all of its life functions (e.g., breeding, foraging, migrating etc.). Resource selection functions (RSFs), which are functions proportional to the probability of use of a resource unit, provide a means to both quantify animal-environment interactions and predict species’ probability of occurrence on a given landscape. When linked to information concerning a species survival and reproduction (e.g., birth, death and recruitment rates), RSFs can be used to determine which resource units constitute critical habitat for a species. I used RSFs to model seasonal resource selection at two spatial scales by a population of woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) in Saskatchewan’s Boreal Shield. Across much of Canada, woodland caribou populations are declining due to anthropogenic-driven habitat loss, fragmentation and alteration; as a result, they are listed as ‘Threatened’ on Canada’s Species at Risk Act. However, compared to other caribou populations in Canada, caribou in Saskatchewan’s Boreal Shield are exposed to unusually low levels of human activity (est. 3% landscape disturbed by humans) but relatively high levels of natural forest fires (est. 55% of landscape burned in the past 40 years). My thesis offers valuable, benchmark insight into how caribou use resources relative to their availability under this largely natural disturbance regime, which likely reflects the pristine conditions under which the species evolved. Ultimately, the RSFs developed here can be used to inform land management decisions pertaining to woodland caribou in Saskatchewan’s Boreal Shield. Thesis caribou Rangifer tarandus University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
op_collection_id ftusaskatchewan
language unknown
topic resource selection
boreal woodland caribou
MCMCglmm
spellingShingle resource selection
boreal woodland caribou
MCMCglmm
Stewart, Kathrine Mary 1985-
Multiscale Resource Selection by Woodland Caribou in Saskatchewan's Boreal Shield: A Fundamental Step Towards Managing a Threatened Species
topic_facet resource selection
boreal woodland caribou
MCMCglmm
description Resource selection is a dynamic behavioural process by which individuals choose resource units (e.g., pixels or points on a landscape) disproportionate to their availability in order to maximize fitness. Because it influences how individuals, and thus populations, are distributed through space and time, understanding how animals choose resource units is fundamental to developing effective, long-term resource management and species’ conservation strategies. One of the first steps in assessing conservation prospects for a species is identifying critical habitat, which is habitat necessary for a species to carry out all of its life functions (e.g., breeding, foraging, migrating etc.). Resource selection functions (RSFs), which are functions proportional to the probability of use of a resource unit, provide a means to both quantify animal-environment interactions and predict species’ probability of occurrence on a given landscape. When linked to information concerning a species survival and reproduction (e.g., birth, death and recruitment rates), RSFs can be used to determine which resource units constitute critical habitat for a species. I used RSFs to model seasonal resource selection at two spatial scales by a population of woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) in Saskatchewan’s Boreal Shield. Across much of Canada, woodland caribou populations are declining due to anthropogenic-driven habitat loss, fragmentation and alteration; as a result, they are listed as ‘Threatened’ on Canada’s Species at Risk Act. However, compared to other caribou populations in Canada, caribou in Saskatchewan’s Boreal Shield are exposed to unusually low levels of human activity (est. 3% landscape disturbed by humans) but relatively high levels of natural forest fires (est. 55% of landscape burned in the past 40 years). My thesis offers valuable, benchmark insight into how caribou use resources relative to their availability under this largely natural disturbance regime, which likely reflects the pristine conditions under which the species evolved. Ultimately, the RSFs developed here can be used to inform land management decisions pertaining to woodland caribou in Saskatchewan’s Boreal Shield.
author2 McLoughlin, Philip D
Johnstone, Jill F
Hwang, Yeen Ten
Rettie, James
Johnson, Chris J
format Thesis
author Stewart, Kathrine Mary 1985-
author_facet Stewart, Kathrine Mary 1985-
author_sort Stewart, Kathrine Mary 1985-
title Multiscale Resource Selection by Woodland Caribou in Saskatchewan's Boreal Shield: A Fundamental Step Towards Managing a Threatened Species
title_short Multiscale Resource Selection by Woodland Caribou in Saskatchewan's Boreal Shield: A Fundamental Step Towards Managing a Threatened Species
title_full Multiscale Resource Selection by Woodland Caribou in Saskatchewan's Boreal Shield: A Fundamental Step Towards Managing a Threatened Species
title_fullStr Multiscale Resource Selection by Woodland Caribou in Saskatchewan's Boreal Shield: A Fundamental Step Towards Managing a Threatened Species
title_full_unstemmed Multiscale Resource Selection by Woodland Caribou in Saskatchewan's Boreal Shield: A Fundamental Step Towards Managing a Threatened Species
title_sort multiscale resource selection by woodland caribou in saskatchewan's boreal shield: a fundamental step towards managing a threatened species
publisher University of Saskatchewan
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/7573
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre caribou
Rangifer tarandus
genre_facet caribou
Rangifer tarandus
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10388/7573
TC-SSU-7573
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