4.6 Article

Forbidden fruit: human settlement and abundant fruit create an ecological trap for an apex omnivore

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
Volume 86, Issue 1, Pages 55-65

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.12589

Keywords

apex species; attractive sink; bear; capture-recapture; compensatory immigration hypothesis; huckleberry; maladaptive habitat selection; mark-recapture; population growth; Ursus arctos

Funding

  1. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships
  3. Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations
  4. Habitat Conservation Trust Fund
  5. Safari Club International
  6. Columbia Basin Trust Fund
  7. BP Canada
  8. BC Conservation Corps

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1. Habitat choice is an evolutionary product of animals experiencing increased fitness when preferentially occupying high-quality habitat. However, an ecological trap (ET) can occur when an animal is presented with novel conditions and the animal's assessment of habitat quality is poorly matched to its resulting fitness. 2. We tested for an ET for grizzly (brown) bears using demographic and movement data collected in an area with rich food resources and concentrated human settlement. 3. We derived measures of habitat attractiveness from occurrence models of bear food resources and estimated demographic parameters using DNA mark-recapture information collected over 8 years (2006-2013). We then paired this information with grizzly bear mortality records to investigate kill and movement rates. 4. Our results demonstrate that a valley high in both berry resources and human density was more attractive than surrounding areas, and bears occupying this region faced 17% lower apparent survival. Despite lower fitness, we detected a net flow of bears into the ET, which contributed to a study-wide population decline. 5. This work highlights the presence and pervasiveness of an ET for an apex omnivore that lacks the evolutionary cues, under human-induced rapid ecological change, to assess trade-offs between food resources and human-caused mortality, which results in maladaptive habitat selection.

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