4.2 Article

Habitat selection by parturient elk (Cervus elaphus) in agricultural and forested landscapes

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY
Volume 88, Issue 10, Pages 968-976

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/Z10-061

Keywords

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Categories

Funding

  1. Riding Mountain National Park of Canada
  2. Manitoba Conservation
  3. Sustainable Development Innovations Fund
  4. Manitoba Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives
  5. Canadian Food Inspection Agency
  6. University of Manitoba
  7. Riding Mountain Biosphere Reserve
  8. Louisiana Pacific Canada (Swan River)
  9. Nature Conservancy of Canada
  10. Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation
  11. Manitoba Wildlife Federation
  12. Eastlands Wildlife Association
  13. Westlake Wildlife Association
  14. Global Precision Inc.
  15. Earth Rhythms Inc.
  16. Shur-Gro Farm Services Ltd.
  17. Seven Oaks Game and Fish
  18. Friends of Riding Mountain National Park
  19. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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I examined the home range and habitat selection of 146 radio-collared female elk (Cervus elaphus L., 1758) from 2002 to 2005 during the calving period (15 May to 24 June). I determined the proportion of home ranges of parturient cow elk during the calving period and the proportion of birthing sites of elk that were in either forested protected areas or the adjacent fragmented agriculture-dominated matrix in southwestern Manitoba, Canada. Overall, 73% of the minimum convex polygon home ranges were entirely within a protected area, 6% were only on farmland, and 21% included both. Home ranges including farmland and protected area (mean = 17.9 km(2)) were 3.8 times larger than those entirely inside a protected area (mean = 4.7 km(2)) or only on farmland (mean = 4.5 km(2)) (U = -2.79, P = 0.005). Female elk remaining solely in protected areas selected deciduous and mixedwood forest, marsh and fen, and water at the scale of the home range. Elk exclusively on farmland selected forage crops only. At the scale of the birthing site, females on farmland and those in protected areas selected only deciduous forest, and both types avoided agricultural cropland and marsh and fen. Identification of calving habitat will allow resource managers to manage bovine tuberculosis in the population more effectively.

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