4.1 Article

Sex differences in a large herbivore's salt water drinking behaviour: a method for applying a female-biased attractant

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Forestry

Anthropogenic disturbances alter responses of understory plants to deer density: A 9-year deer density control experiment

Hino Takafumi et al.

Summary: The increasing deer population and anthropogenic disturbances have altered plant diversity in the northern hemisphere. This study investigates the effects of deer on plant communities under nitrogen deposition and logging conditions, highlighting the importance of considering these interactions for forest ecosystem management.

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2023)

Article Environmental Sciences

Re-framing deer herbivory as a natural disturbance regime with ecological and socioeconomic outcomes in the eastern United States

Brice B. Hanberry et al.

Summary: Large herbivores, such as white-tailed deer, are natural disturbances that have both positive and negative impacts on ecosystems and economies. They play a crucial role in controlling tree and shrub densities, reducing fuel, and restoring herbaceous plants and historic open forests. However, their feeding behavior also causes damage to forests.

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT (2023)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Spatial variation in red deer density in a transboundary forest ecosystem

Mahdieh Tourani et al.

Summary: Forests in Europe are facing increasingly frequent and severe disturbances, which can have profound consequences for the wildlife inhabiting them. To adapt management strategies and coordinate them across borders, reliable estimates of red deer density and abundance are needed. This study conducted a transnational DNA sampling and spatial capture-recapture models to estimate red deer abundance in the Bohemian Forest Ecosystem and found that forest disturbances and different management regimes shaped spatial heterogeneity in red deer density.

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS (2023)

Article Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science

Do Feed Plants Provide Sufficient Sodium, Calcium and Magnesium to Sika Deer in Japan? An Analysis Using Global Plant Trait Data

Taiki Mori et al.

Summary: Selective culling of female sika deer is effective in reducing overabundant populations, and sodium and calcium can act as attractants for this purpose. Our analysis showed that sufficient sodium and calcium are not always provided by feed plants, especially when intake is low and deer are large. Sodium deficiency is more intense for lactating females, while calcium deficiency is more intense for males. The findings suggest that sodium and calcium could be useful for developing effective culling methods, particularly for selective culling of lactating female sika deer.

ANIMALS (2023)

Article Forestry

Spatiotemporal changes in antlerless proportion of culled Sika deer in relation to deer density

Kei K. Suzuki et al.

Summary: The study on the spatiotemporal distribution of the antlerless ratio in culled sika deer revealed that the ratio increases asymptotically as deer density rises, supporting the hypothesis. These findings should help to increase the efficiency of managing the deer via antlerless-biased culling.

JOURNAL OF FORESTRY RESEARCH (2022)

Article Ecology

Spatially biased reduction of browsing damage by sika deer through culling

Kei K. Suzuki et al.

Summary: This study verifies the effect of selective culling on reducing browsing damage by considering spatial changes, and finds that the benefits of selective culling extend to the spatial scale of culling.

JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT (2022)

Article Forestry

A 25-Year Study of the Population Dynamics of a Harvested Population of Sika Deer on Kyushu Island, Japan

Kei K. Suzuki et al.

Summary: The authors investigated the density distribution and population dynamics of a managed population of sika deer on Kyushu Island, Japan, and found no decreasing trend in the population despite efforts to reduce it. The possible explanation is that the initial estimation of the population was underestimated. This study emphasizes the difficulties of wide-area management of sika deer and highlights three important factors for successful management.

FORESTS (2022)

Article Biology

A 17-Year Study of the Response of Populations to Different Patterns in Antlerless Proportion of Imposed Culls: Antlerless Culling Reduces Overabundant Deer Population

Kei K. Suzuki et al.

Summary: The study evaluated the effectiveness of antlerless culling on sika deer population dynamics. It found that deer populations decreased in areas with higher antlerless culling and increased in areas with lower antlerless culling. This suggests that a high proportion of antlerless culling can effectively decrease the deer population. The study highlights the importance of antlerless-biased culling in managing overabundant populations of herbivores.

BIOLOGY-BASEL (2022)

Article Forestry

Large-scale spatial distribution of deer browsing damage to young tree plantations

Kei K. Suzuki et al.

Summary: The study used a generalized additive model to analyze sporadic data and reveal large-scale spatial variation in deer browsing damage. Browsing damage increased with plantation age, with stands aged 2+ years showing more damage. Areas of high browsing damage generally coincided with areas of high deer abundance.

IFOREST-BIOGEOSCIENCES AND FORESTRY (2021)

Article Ecology

Restoring Forests in Central New Jersey through Effective Deer Management

Thomas Almendinger et al.

ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION (2020)

Article Environmental Sciences

The Impact of Sika Deer on Vegetation in Japan: Setting Management Priorities on a National Scale

Haruka Ohashi et al.

ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (2014)

Review Forestry

Determinants of deer impact in European forests - A systematic literature analysis

Philipp Gerhardt et al.

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2013)

Article Zoology

Culling Versus Density Effects in Management of a Deer Population

MAYUMI UENO et al.

JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT (2011)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Changes in the Structure of the Japanese Hunter Population from 1965 to 2005

Gouhei Ueda et al.

HUMAN DIMENSIONS OF WILDLIFE (2010)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Effects of sika deer on vegetation in Japan: A review

Seiki Takatsuki

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION (2009)

Article Ecology

Importance of natural licks for the mammals in Bornean inland tropical rain forests

Hisashi Matsubayashi et al.

ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH (2007)

Review Ecology

Ecological impacts of deer overabundance

SD Cote et al.

ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY EVOLUTION AND SYSTEMATICS (2004)