The ecology of woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan

Habitat selection has been described as a hierarchical process that may yield various patterns depending on the spatial and temporal scales of investigation. I employed forest cover data and animal locations obtained through satellite radio-telemetry to examine patterns of habitat selection by femal...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rettie, William James
Other Authors: Messier, François
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Saskatchewan 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-10212004-001111
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spelling ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/etd-10212004-001111 2023-05-15T15:51:17+02:00 The ecology of woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan Rettie, William James Messier, François January 1998 http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-10212004-001111 en_US eng University of Saskatchewan http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-10212004-001111 TC-SSU-10212004001111 text Thesis 1998 ftusaskatchewan 2022-01-17T11:52:41Z Habitat selection has been described as a hierarchical process that may yield various patterns depending on the spatial and temporal scales of investigation. I employed forest cover data and animal locations obtained through satellite radio-telemetry to examine patterns of habitat selection by female woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) in central Saskatchewan. I began with random sampling of various types of forest stands focused on vegetation strata shown elsewhere to be of importance to woodland caribou. Cluster analysis and ordination by nonmetric multidimensional scaling suggested that six vegetation community types be recognized. Canonical correspondence analysis revealed strong relationships between the vegetation communities and data on canopy characteristics contained in the provincial forest inventory. Woodland caribou in Saskatchewan are now aggregated into several spatially disjunct populations. With regard to reproduction, first conception by females occurred at 16 months; the overall pregnancy rate was 94%; and the minimum parturition rate was 86%, all of which indicate adequate nutrition. The annual survival rate of adults was 84%, which is comparatively low, Calf recruitment was also low (28 calves: 100 cows), which I suspect was due to predation. Wolves (Canis lupus) have long been thought to limit woodland caribou populations while subsisting on other ungulate prey, but I speculate that black bear (Ursus americanus) predation may be an important cause of poor calf survival. My habitat selection work was conducted at both coarse (seasonal range) and finer (daily area) scales. Female caribou selected peatlands and black spruce dominated stands over recently disturbed stands and early seral stage forests in all five populations studied. This pattern may reveal the effective avoidance of wolves, the primary factor limiting caribou throughout the boreal forest. In three populations where coarse level selection suggested a relative preference of young forest stands or clearcuts, I found a reversal in selection patterns in finer scale selection. I interpret this to indicate that these populations are relics of a once more continuous distribution, and that their coarse level selection best describes historic rather than current selection. I determined that the hierarchy of habitat selection reflected the hierarchy of factors actually or potentially limiting caribou populations. Thesis Canis lupus caribou Rangifer tarandus University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
institution Open Polar
collection University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
op_collection_id ftusaskatchewan
language English
description Habitat selection has been described as a hierarchical process that may yield various patterns depending on the spatial and temporal scales of investigation. I employed forest cover data and animal locations obtained through satellite radio-telemetry to examine patterns of habitat selection by female woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) in central Saskatchewan. I began with random sampling of various types of forest stands focused on vegetation strata shown elsewhere to be of importance to woodland caribou. Cluster analysis and ordination by nonmetric multidimensional scaling suggested that six vegetation community types be recognized. Canonical correspondence analysis revealed strong relationships between the vegetation communities and data on canopy characteristics contained in the provincial forest inventory. Woodland caribou in Saskatchewan are now aggregated into several spatially disjunct populations. With regard to reproduction, first conception by females occurred at 16 months; the overall pregnancy rate was 94%; and the minimum parturition rate was 86%, all of which indicate adequate nutrition. The annual survival rate of adults was 84%, which is comparatively low, Calf recruitment was also low (28 calves: 100 cows), which I suspect was due to predation. Wolves (Canis lupus) have long been thought to limit woodland caribou populations while subsisting on other ungulate prey, but I speculate that black bear (Ursus americanus) predation may be an important cause of poor calf survival. My habitat selection work was conducted at both coarse (seasonal range) and finer (daily area) scales. Female caribou selected peatlands and black spruce dominated stands over recently disturbed stands and early seral stage forests in all five populations studied. This pattern may reveal the effective avoidance of wolves, the primary factor limiting caribou throughout the boreal forest. In three populations where coarse level selection suggested a relative preference of young forest stands or clearcuts, I found a reversal in selection patterns in finer scale selection. I interpret this to indicate that these populations are relics of a once more continuous distribution, and that their coarse level selection best describes historic rather than current selection. I determined that the hierarchy of habitat selection reflected the hierarchy of factors actually or potentially limiting caribou populations.
author2 Messier, François
format Thesis
author Rettie, William James
spellingShingle Rettie, William James
The ecology of woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan
author_facet Rettie, William James
author_sort Rettie, William James
title The ecology of woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan
title_short The ecology of woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan
title_full The ecology of woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan
title_fullStr The ecology of woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan
title_full_unstemmed The ecology of woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan
title_sort ecology of woodland caribou in central saskatchewan
publisher University of Saskatchewan
publishDate 1998
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-10212004-001111
genre Canis lupus
caribou
Rangifer tarandus
genre_facet Canis lupus
caribou
Rangifer tarandus
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-10212004-001111
TC-SSU-10212004001111
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