4.3 Article

Influence of landscape attributes on Virginia opossum density

期刊

JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
卷 86, 期 7, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jwmg.22280

关键词

abundance index; Didelphis virginiana; landscape ecology; population density; southeast United States; spatial capture-recapture; telemetry; Virginia opossum

资金

  1. United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service [17-74881290-CA, 18-7488-1290-CA, 19-7488-1290-CA]
  2. United States Department of Energy [DE-EM0004391]

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Based on a multi-year spatial capture-recapture study, we estimated the effects of habitat on Virginia opossum density and found that opossums in the relatively undeveloped southeastern United States had lower densities compared to more human-dominated landscapes. Opossums occurred at higher densities in bottomland swamps and riparian hardwood forests compared to upland pine plantations and isolated wetlands.
The Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana), North America's only marsupial, has a range extending from southern Ontario, Canada, to the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico, and from the Atlantic seaboard to the Pacific. Despite the Virginia opossum's taxonomic uniqueness in relation to other mammals in North America and rapidly expanding distribution, its ecology remains relatively understudied. Our poor understanding of the ecology of this important mesopredator is especially pronounced in the rural southeastern United States. Our goal was to estimate effects of habitat on opossum density within an extensive multi-year spatial capture-recapture study. Additionally, we compared the results of this spatial capture-recapture analysis with a simple relative abundance index. Opossum densities in the relatively underdeveloped regions of the southeastern United States were lower compared to the more human-dominated landscapes of the Northeast and Midwest. In the southeastern United States, Virginia opossums occurred at a higher density in bottomland swamp and riparian hardwood forest compared to upland pine (Pinus spp.) plantations and isolated wetlands. These results reinforce the notion that the Virginia opossum is commonly associated with land cover types adjacent to permanent water (bottomland swamps, riparian hardwood). The relatively low density of opossums at isolated wetland sites suggests that the large spatial scale of selection demonstrated by opossums gives the species access to preferable cover types within the same landscape.

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