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An Examination of Scale-Dependent Resource Use by Eastern Hognose Snakes in Southcentral New Hampshire
Authors:KIRK E LAGORY  LEROY J WALSTON  CELINE GOULET  ROBERT A VAN LONKHUYZEN  STEPHEN NAJJAR  CHRISTIAN ANDREWS
Institution:1. Environmental Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory, 9700 S Cass Avenue, Argonne, IL 60439, USA;2. Department of Natural Resources, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH 03824, USA;3. New Boston Air Force Station, 317 Chestnut Hill Road, New Boston Air Force Station, NH 03070, USA
Abstract:ABSTRACT The decline of many snake populations is attributable to habitat loss, and knowledge of habitat use is critical to their conservation. Resource characteristics (e.g., relative availability of different habitat types, soils, and slopes) within a landscape are scale-dependent and may not be equal across multiple spatial scales. Thus, it is important to identify the relevant spatial scales at which resource selection occurs. We conducted a radiotelemetry study of eastern hognose snake (Heterodon platirhinos) home range size and resource use at different hierarchical spatial scales. We present the results for 8 snakes radiotracked during a 2-year study at New Boston Air Force Station (NBAFS) in southern New Hampshire, USA, where the species is listed by the state as endangered. Mean home range size (minimum convex polygon) at NBAFS (51.7 ± 14.7 ha) was similar to that reported in other parts of the species’ range. Radiotracked snakes exhibited different patterns of resource use at different spatial scales. At the landscape scale (selection of locations within the landscape), snakes overutilized old-field and forest edge habitats and underutilized forested habitats and wetlands relative to availability. At this scale, snakes also overutilized areas containing sandy loam soils and areas with lower slope (mean slope = 5.2% at snake locations vs. 6.7% at random locations). We failed to detect some of these patterns of resource use at the home range scale (i.e., within the home range). Our ability to detect resource selection by the snakes only at the landscape scale is likely the result of greater heterogeneity in macrohabitat features at the broader landscape scale. From a management perspective, future studies of habitat selection for rare species should include measurement of available habitat at spatial scales larger than the home range. We suggest that the maintenance of open early successional habitats as a component of forested landscapes will be critical for the persistence of eastern hognose snake populations in the northeastern United States.
Keywords:eastern hognose snake  habitat selection  Heterodon platirhinos  home range  management  New Hampshire  spatial scale
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