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SCALE-DEPENDENT SUMMER RESOURCE SELECTION BY REINTRODUCED ELK IN WISCONSIN,USA
Authors:DEAN P ANDERSON  MONICA G TURNER  JAMES D FORESTER  JUN ZHU  MARK S BOYCE  HAWTHORNE BEYER  LAINE STOWELL
Institution:1. Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 430 Lincoln Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA;2. Department of Statistics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA;3. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton T6G 2E9, Canada;4. Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, 10220 North State Highway 27, Hayward, WI 54843, USA
Abstract:Abstract: Identifying how habitat use is influenced by environmental heterogeneity at different scales is central to understanding ungulate population dynamics on complex landscapes. We used resource selection functions (RSF) to study summer habitat use in a reintroduced and expanding elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) population in the Chequamegon National Forest, Wisconsin, USA. Factors were examined that influenced where elk established home ranges and that influenced habitat use within established home ranges. We also determined grain sizes over which elk responded to environmental heterogeneity and the number of categories of habitat selection from low to high that the elk distinguished. At a large spatial extent, elk home-range establishment was largely explained by the spatial distribution of wolf (Canis lupus) territories. Forage abundance was also influential but was relatively more important at a small spatial extent when elk moved within established home ranges. Areas near roads were avoided when establishing a home-range, but areas near roads were selected for use within the established home range. Elk distinguished among 4 different categories of habitat selection when establishing and moving within home ranges. Spatial and temporal cross validation demonstrated that to improve the predictive strength of habitat models in areas of low inter-annual variability in the environment, it is better to follow more individuals across diverse environmental conditions than to follow the same individuals over a longer time period. Last, our results show that the effects of environmental variables on habitat use were scale-dependent and reemphasize the necessity of analyzing habitat use at multiple scales that are fit to address specific research questions.
Keywords:Canis lupus  Cervus elaphus  cross validation  forage  habitat  heterogeneity  resource selection functions  scale-dependent  Wisconsin
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