Territoriality drives preemptive habitat selection in recovering wolves: Implications for carnivore conservation

Shawn T. O'Neil, John A. Vucetich, Dean E. Beyer, Sarah R. Hoy, Joseph K. Bump

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

According to the ideal-free distribution (IFD), individuals within a population are free to select habitats that maximize their chances of success. Assuming knowledge of habitat quality, the IFD predicts that average fitness will be approximately equal among individuals and between habitats, while density varies, implying that habitat selection will be density dependent. Populations are often assumed to follow an IFD, although this assumption is rarely tested with empirical data, and may be incorrect when territoriality indicates habitat selection tactics that deviate from the IFD (e.g. ideal-despotic distribution or ideal-preemptive distribution). When territoriality influences habitat selection, species' density will not directly reflect components of fitness such as reproductive success or survival. In such cases, assuming an IFD can lead to false conclusions about habitat quality. We tested theoretical models of density-dependent habitat selection on a species known to exhibit territorial behaviour in order to determine whether commonly applied habitat models are appropriate under these circumstances. We combined long-term radiotelemetry and census data from grey wolves Canis lupus in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, USA to relate spatiotemporal variability in wolf density to underlying classifications of habitat within a hierarchical state-space modelling framework. We then iteratively applied isodar analysis to evaluate which distribution of habitat selection best described this recolonizing wolf population. The wolf population in our study expanded by >1,000% during our study (~50 to >600 individuals), and density-dependent habitat selection was most consistent with the ideal-preemptive distribution, as opposed to the ideal-free or ideal-despotic alternatives. Population density of terrestrial carnivores may not be positively correlated with the fitness value of their habitats, and density-dependent habitat selection patterns may help to explain complex predator–prey dynamics and cascading indirect effects. Source–sink population dynamics appear likely when species exhibit rapid growth and occupy interspersed habitats of contrasting quality. These conditions are likely and have implications for large carnivores in many systems, such as areas in North America and Europe where large predator species are currently recolonizing their former ranges.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1433-1447
Number of pages15
JournalJournal of Animal Ecology
Volume89
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 1 2020

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This research was funded by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources (MTU grant #751B430037 to J.K.B.). We are grateful for additional support from Federal Aid in the Wildlife Restoration Act (Pittman‐Robertson project W‐147‐R), National Science Foundation grants to J.K.B. (NSF ID#1545611, NSF ID#1556676), the DeVlieg Foundation and the Ecosystem Science Center (School of Forest Resources and Environmental Science at Michigan Technological University, MI, USA). The Michigan Involvement Committee of Safari Club International provided funding for radiocollars and other equipments. We thank Erin Largent, Robert Doepker, Steve Carson, Brian Roell and Chris Webster for assisting with data needs during analysis. Mike Haen, Brad Johnson, Donald Lonsway, Jeff Lukowski and Kristie Sitar assisted with capturing and radiocollaring wolves. Pilots Neil Harri, Dean Minett and Gordon Zuehlke collected collared wolf relocation data.

Funding Information:
This research was funded by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources (MTU grant #751B430037 to J.K.B.). We are grateful for additional support from Federal Aid in the Wildlife Restoration Act (Pittman-Robertson project W-147-R), National Science Foundation grants to J.K.B. (NSF ID#1545611, NSF ID#1556676), the DeVlieg Foundation and the Ecosystem Science Center (School of Forest Resources and Environmental Science at Michigan Technological University, MI, USA). The Michigan Involvement Committee of Safari Club International provided funding for radiocollars and other equipments. We thank Erin Largent, Robert Doepker, Steve Carson, Brian Roell and Chris Webster for assisting with data needs during analysis. Mike Haen, Brad Johnson, Donald Lonsway, Jeff Lukowski and Kristie Sitar assisted with capturing and radiocollaring wolves. Pilots Neil Harri, Dean Minett and Gordon Zuehlke collected collared wolf relocation data.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 British Ecological Society

Keywords

  • anthropogenic mortality
  • apex predators
  • density-dependent habitat selection
  • isodar
  • predator–prey
  • rewilding
  • source–sink population dynamics
  • trophic cascades

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Territoriality drives preemptive habitat selection in recovering wolves: Implications for carnivore conservation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this