Journal
JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
Volume 79, Issue 1, Pages 39-49Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jwmg.817
Keywords
abundance; black-tailed deer; mark-recapture; microsatellite; noninvasive DNA; sex ratio
Funding
- California Department of Fish and Wildlife
- California Deer Association
- Veterinary Genetics Laboratory and Forensics Sciences Masters Program at University of California Davis
- University of California Davis Graduate Group in Ecology
- Robert and Patricia Switzer Environmental Fellowship Program
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The recent development of fecal-genetic capture-mark-recapture (CMR) methods has increased the feasibility of estimating abundance of forest-dwelling ungulates that are difficult to survey using visual methods. Unless genetic markers differentiating sex are incorporated into such studies, however, genetic CMR approaches risk missing sex-specific differences in population trends. We developed a single-reaction genetic assay for sex and individual identification, including 10 microsatellites and an SRY marker, and applied it in the context of a post-fawning CMR study of Columbian black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus) in forested habitat of coastal California during 2011 and 2012. We measured sex-specific abundance and sex ratios in high-quality summer habitats encompassing 4 distinct fawning areas. We detected a significant interaction between sex and year, indicating different trends in the abundance of males and females. We also detected a significant decline in abundance of females between years (P=0.045), which agreed with independent telemetry-based estimates, and significant differences in female abundance among fawning areas (P=0.020) but no significant differences in the abundance of males for either variable (F-1-3,F-20 < 0.710, P>0.410). When sex was not considered in the analysis, we found no significant differences in abundance between the 2 years, suggesting that differing trends between the 2 sexes obscured the female-specific patterns. We estimated average local (i.e., on the high-quality summer ranges) density ((D) over cap) for females at 41.0 (+/- 5.9)deer/km(2) in 2011 and 29.1 (+/- 6.8)deer/km(2) in 2012, and local density of males at 15.7 (+/- 3.0)deer/km(2) across the 2 study years. Accordingly, sex ratios differed between years (95% CI=3.0-4.2 F:M ratio in 2011, 2.0-2.3 F:M ratio in 2012). Incorporating sex and individual markers into a single assay provided a cost-effective means of applying CMR estimation based on fecal DNA to a high-density ungulate population in a forested ecosystem and emphasized the importance of explicitly modeling sex in abundance estimation. (c) 2014 The Wildlife Society.
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