4.5 Article

Spatio-temporal ranging behaviour and its relevance to foraging strategies in wide-ranging wolverines

期刊

ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
卷 221, 期 6, 页码 936-943

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2009.12.024

关键词

Discrete choice model; Habitat; Home range use; GPS; Movement patterns; Forest-alpine tundra ecotone; Resource selection function

类别

资金

  1. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research
  2. Directorate for Nature Management, several Norwegian Counties
  3. Norwegian Research Council
  4. Alertis (Fund for Bear and Nature Conservation)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Conservation of carnivores in an increasingly changing environment is greatly helped by understanding the decision-making processes underlying habitat patch choice. Foraging theory may give us insight into spatio-temporal search patterns and consequent foraging decisions that carnivores make in heterogeneous and fluctuating environments. Constraints placed on central-place foragers in particular are likely to influence both foraging decisions and related spatio-temporal movement patterns. We used discrete choice models to investigate the spatio-temporal ranging behaviour of GPS collared female wolverines (Gulo gulo) with dependent cubs in south-central Norway. Activity patterns, home range use and selection for elevation were analyzed in relation to spatial and temporal covariates (daily and seasonal) and related to different foraging behaviours. In spring, wolverines showed restricted movement patterns around rendezvous sites at high elevations by day, whereas during the night animals were active at lower elevations. Over the summer, this daily pattern in intensity of use diminished and their overall selectiveness for elevation decreased as cubs grow more mobile and independent. At the onset of autumn, wolverines showed intensive use of the profitable forest-alpine tundra ecotone. We argue that reproducing wolverines deployed a foraging strategy attuned to altering their movement patterns throughout the summer to address a continuous, but diminishing, trade-off between providing both food and shelter for their offspring. Incorporating spatially and temporally explicit activity patterns and home range use in discrete choice resource selection models thus enhances the understanding of the motives behind wolverine resource utilization in space and time. Such knowledge may provide guidance to managers designing regional-scale zoning, in order to facilitate carnivore recovery and to minimize conflicts with human activities. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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