4.3 Article

Juvenile moose stress and nutrition dynamics related to winter ticks, landscape characteristics, climate-mediated factors and survival

期刊

CONSERVATION PHYSIOLOGY
卷 9, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/conphys/coab048

关键词

Stress metabolites; nutritional restriction; non-invasive sampling; survival; moose; winter tick

资金

  1. Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department
  2. Safari Club International [06120FY18501]
  3. US Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture McIntire-Stennis Program [1002300]
  4. University of Vermont's Rubenstein School of the Environment and Natural Resources' Rubenstein Graduate Fellowship
  5. US Fish and Wildlife Service Division of Wildlife and Sportfish Restoration-Wildlife Restoration Program
  6. NIFA [690046, 1002300] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Research focused on the impact of environmental factors on stress and nutrition in moose calves, predicting winter survival rates with models including tick infestation, body weight, and habitat type as significant influences.
Moose populations in the northeastern United States have declined over the past 15 years, primarily due to the impacts of winter ticks. Research efforts have focused on the effects of winter tick infestation on moose survival and reproduction, but stress and nutritional responses to ticks and other stressors remain understudied. We examined the influence of several environmental factors on moose calf stress hormone metabolite concentrations and nutritional restriction in Vermont, USA. We collected 407 fecal and 461 snowurine samples from84 radio-collared moose calves in the winters of 2017-2019 (JanuaryApril) to measure fecal glucocorticoid metabolites (fGCM) concentrations and urea nitrogen:creatinine (UN:C) ratios. We used generalized mixed-effects models to evaluate the influence of individual condition, winter ticks, habitat, climate and human development on stress and nutrition in calf moose. We then used these physiological data to build generalized linear models to predict calf winter survival. CalffGCMconcentrations increased with nutritional restriction and snowdepth during adult winter tick engorgement. Calf UN:C ratios increased in calves with lighterweights and higher tick loads in early winter. Calf UN:C ratios also increased in individuals with home ranges composed of little deciduous forests during adult winter tick engorgement. Our predictive models estimated that winter survival was negatively related to UN:C ratios and positively related to fGCM concentrations, particularly in early winter. By late March, as winter ticks are having their greatest toll and endogenous resources become depleted, we estimated a curvilinear relationship between fGCM concentrations and survival. Our results provide novel evidence linking moose calf stress and nutrition, a problematic parasite and challenging environment and winter survival. Our findings provide a baseline to support the development of non-invasive physiological monitoring for assessing environmental impacts on moose populations.

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