4.2 Article

Assessing translocation effects on the spatial ecology and survival of muskrats Ondatra zibethicus

期刊

WILDLIFE BIOLOGY
卷 2021, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

WILDLIFE BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.2981/wlb.00823

关键词

beaver; Castor canadensis; dispersal; home range; lodge; muskrat; Ondatra zibethicus; survival; Voyageurs National Park

资金

  1. Initiative Foundation
  2. Minnesota Environment Trust Fund
  3. Legislative Citizen Commission on Minnesota Resources (LCCMR) [152-D]
  4. Department of Horticulture and Natural Resources (Kansas State University)
  5. Voyageurs National Park
  6. United States National Park

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Muskrats are semiaquatic herbivores experiencing population declines in North America. This study in Voyageurs National Park translocated and monitored muskrats, finding similar post-translocation survival rates and space-use patterns compared to non-translocated individuals. The study suggests that translocation may be effective for establishing or enhancing local muskrat populations.
Muskrats Ondatra zibethicus are semiaquatic herbivores experiencing long-term and widespread population declines across North America. Translocation may be a viable tool to bolster or reestablish local populations; however, subsequent effects of translocation on muskrats are unknown. We live-trapped and translocated radiomarked muskrats (n = 65) during the summers of 2018-2019 in Voyageurs National Park, MN, USA and assessed post-translocation effects on weekly survival probabilities and space-use patterns. We did not observe homing behavior, though individuals moved an average of 2.2 km (SE = 0.30 km) from release sites and established home ranges within similar to 8 days (SE = 1.16 days) post-translocation. Weekly post-translocation survival probabilities (0.95, SE = 0.001) and average home-range sizes (2.52 ha, SE = 0.44 ha) were similar to other studies of non-translocated muskrats. Our most-supported known-fate survival model revealed muskrats using beaver Castor canadensis lodges had greater weekly survival probabilities. Additionally, weekly muskrat survival varied between years suggesting a positive response to a novel soft-release technique applied in 2019. Our study provides the first empirical assessment of translocation effects on muskrats and suggests translocation may be effective for establishing or enhancing local muskrat populations. Additionally, our study suggests beaver lodges may confer fitness benefits to sympatric muskrats particularly during dispersal.

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