Roads Elicit Negative Movement and Habitat-Selection Responses by Wolverines (Gulo Gulo Luscus)

The fine-scale behavior of wildlife when crossing roads and interacting with traffic is likely to mirror natural responses to predation risk including not responding, pausing, avoiding, or increasing speed during crossing. We generated coarse-scale behavioral predictions based on these expectations...

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Main Authors: Scrafford, Matthew A., Avgar, Tal, Heeres, Rick, Boyce, Mark S.
Other Authors: Oxford University Press
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Hosted by Utah State University Libraries 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/wild_facpub/2753
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spelling ftutahsudc:oai:digitalcommons.usu.edu:wild_facpub-3753 2023-05-15T16:32:18+02:00 Roads Elicit Negative Movement and Habitat-Selection Responses by Wolverines (Gulo Gulo Luscus) Scrafford, Matthew A. Avgar, Tal Heeres, Rick Boyce, Mark S. Oxford University Press 2018-02-08T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/wild_facpub/2753 unknown Hosted by Utah State University Libraries https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/wild_facpub/2753 Wildland Resources Faculty Publications negative movement habitat-selection wolberines Environmental Sciences text 2018 ftutahsudc 2022-03-07T21:46:47Z The fine-scale behavior of wildlife when crossing roads and interacting with traffic is likely to mirror natural responses to predation risk including not responding, pausing, avoiding, or increasing speed during crossing. We generated coarse-scale behavioral predictions based on these expectations that could be assessed with GPS radiotelemetry. We evaluated our predictions using an integrated step-selection analysis of wolverine (Gulo gulo luscus) space use in relation to spatially and temporally dynamic vehicle traffic on industrial roads in northern Alberta. We compared support for alternative models of road avoidance, increased speed near roads, and road avoidance and increased speed near roads. We predicted that wolverines would avoid roads and increase their speed near roads and that these behaviors would increase with traffic volume. We found that vehicle traffic was relatively low (0–30 vehicles/12 h) but important for explaining wolverine space use. Top winter and summer models indicated that wolverines avoided and increased speed near roads. Wolverine movement, but not avoidance, increased with traffic volume. We suggest that movement is a fine-scaled response that is more responsive to vehicle traffic than habitat selection. We show that roads, regardless of traffic volume, reduce the quality of wolverine habitats and that higher-traffic roads might be most deleterious. We suggest that wildlife behavior near roads should be viewed as a continuum and that accurate modeling of behavior when near roads requires quantification of both movement and habitat selection. Mitigating the effects of roads on wolverines would require clustering roads, road closures, or access management. Text Gulo gulo Utah State University: DigitalCommons@USU
institution Open Polar
collection Utah State University: DigitalCommons@USU
op_collection_id ftutahsudc
language unknown
topic negative movement
habitat-selection
wolberines
Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle negative movement
habitat-selection
wolberines
Environmental Sciences
Scrafford, Matthew A.
Avgar, Tal
Heeres, Rick
Boyce, Mark S.
Roads Elicit Negative Movement and Habitat-Selection Responses by Wolverines (Gulo Gulo Luscus)
topic_facet negative movement
habitat-selection
wolberines
Environmental Sciences
description The fine-scale behavior of wildlife when crossing roads and interacting with traffic is likely to mirror natural responses to predation risk including not responding, pausing, avoiding, or increasing speed during crossing. We generated coarse-scale behavioral predictions based on these expectations that could be assessed with GPS radiotelemetry. We evaluated our predictions using an integrated step-selection analysis of wolverine (Gulo gulo luscus) space use in relation to spatially and temporally dynamic vehicle traffic on industrial roads in northern Alberta. We compared support for alternative models of road avoidance, increased speed near roads, and road avoidance and increased speed near roads. We predicted that wolverines would avoid roads and increase their speed near roads and that these behaviors would increase with traffic volume. We found that vehicle traffic was relatively low (0–30 vehicles/12 h) but important for explaining wolverine space use. Top winter and summer models indicated that wolverines avoided and increased speed near roads. Wolverine movement, but not avoidance, increased with traffic volume. We suggest that movement is a fine-scaled response that is more responsive to vehicle traffic than habitat selection. We show that roads, regardless of traffic volume, reduce the quality of wolverine habitats and that higher-traffic roads might be most deleterious. We suggest that wildlife behavior near roads should be viewed as a continuum and that accurate modeling of behavior when near roads requires quantification of both movement and habitat selection. Mitigating the effects of roads on wolverines would require clustering roads, road closures, or access management.
author2 Oxford University Press
format Text
author Scrafford, Matthew A.
Avgar, Tal
Heeres, Rick
Boyce, Mark S.
author_facet Scrafford, Matthew A.
Avgar, Tal
Heeres, Rick
Boyce, Mark S.
author_sort Scrafford, Matthew A.
title Roads Elicit Negative Movement and Habitat-Selection Responses by Wolverines (Gulo Gulo Luscus)
title_short Roads Elicit Negative Movement and Habitat-Selection Responses by Wolverines (Gulo Gulo Luscus)
title_full Roads Elicit Negative Movement and Habitat-Selection Responses by Wolverines (Gulo Gulo Luscus)
title_fullStr Roads Elicit Negative Movement and Habitat-Selection Responses by Wolverines (Gulo Gulo Luscus)
title_full_unstemmed Roads Elicit Negative Movement and Habitat-Selection Responses by Wolverines (Gulo Gulo Luscus)
title_sort roads elicit negative movement and habitat-selection responses by wolverines (gulo gulo luscus)
publisher Hosted by Utah State University Libraries
publishDate 2018
url https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/wild_facpub/2753
genre Gulo gulo
genre_facet Gulo gulo
op_source Wildland Resources Faculty Publications
op_relation https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/wild_facpub/2753
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