4.1 Article

Occurrence patterns of wild turkeys altered by wild pigs

期刊

WILDLIFE SOCIETY BULLETIN
卷 46, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/wsb.1266

关键词

2-species occupancy; Arkansas; competition; Meleagris gallopavo; Sus scrofa; wild pig; wild turkey

资金

  1. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Pittman-Robertson Federal Aid in Wildlife Research [AR-W-F16AF0030]
  2. Arkansas Game and Fish Commission
  3. National Wild Turkey Federation
  4. University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture
  5. University of Arkansas at Monticello
  6. U.S. Forest Service Ozark St. Francis National Forest

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study evaluated the effects of wild pig presence on wild turkeys and found that the presence of wild pigs increased the occupancy rate of turkeys but decreased their detectability. The results suggest that wild turkeys and wild pigs tend to select for similar environmental conditions and the presence of wild pigs can have indirect effects on turkeys, affecting their breeding behaviors and habitat use patterns.
Eastern wild turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo silvestris) are an important game bird in the United States, particularly in the Southeast. The introduction of wild pigs (Sus scrofa) can negatively affect native wildlife, habitat quality, and ecosystem functions. To explore the potential effects that pig presence, through habitat degradation and interspecific competition, may have on wild turkeys, we evaluated changes in occupancy of co-occurring wild pigs and wild turkeys.We deployed camera-monitored bait stations on 3 wildlife management areas in Arkansas during January-April 2017-2019 and collected >680,000 images to determine turkey and wild pig occurrence. We evaluated presence/absence of turkeys and wild pigs in camera trap images using Timelapse2 image analyzer software (R) and then used program MARK to create 2-species occupancy models and determine the effect of wild pig presence and various landscape covariates on the occupancy and detectability of wild turkeys. The occupancy rate of wild pigs was 50.4% (95% CI = 46.9%-54.0%) and included positive relationships with the percent cover of deciduous forest and the number of wildlife openings within 500 m. The occupancy rate of turkeys increased from 45.5% (95% CI = 39.3%-51.6%) when wild pigs were not present to 59.4% (95% CI = 45.2%-73.5%, 95%) when wild pigs were present, indicating a tendency of the 2 species to select for similar environmental conditions (Species Interaction Factor = 1.13). Detectability of turkeys decreased when wild pigs occupied a site at any point during the season, regardless of whether or not the wild pigs were detected during the same trapping occasion. The decrease in detectability suggests a possible short-term displacement of turkeys by wild pigs. This displacement can have indirect effects through alteration of breeding behaviors and altered habitat use patterns, and these indirect effects represent an important topic for research moving forward.

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