Demography and Genetic Structure of a Recovering Grizzly Bear Population |
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Authors: | KATHERINE C. KENDALL JEFFREY B. STETZ JOHN BOULANGER AMY C. MACLEOD DAVID PAETKAU GARY C. WHITE |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of Montana Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit, Glacier Field Station, Glacier National Park, West Glacier, MT 59936, USA;2. Integrated Ecological Research, 924 Innes Street, Nelson, BC V1L 5T2, Canada;3. Wildlife Genetics International, Box 274, Nelson, BC V1L 5P9, Canada;4. Department of Fish, Wildlife and Conservation Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACT Grizzly bears (brown bears; Ursus arctos) are imperiled in the southern extent of their range worldwide. The threatened population in northwestern Montana, USA, has been managed for recovery since 1975; yet, no rigorous data were available to monitor program success. We used data from a large noninvasive genetic sampling effort conducted in 2004 and 33 years of physical captures to assess abundance, distribution, and genetic health of this population. We combined data from our 3 sampling methods (hair trap, bear rub, and physical capture) to construct individual bear encounter histories for use in Huggins—Pledger closed mark—recapture models. Our population estimate, Ň = 765 (95% CI = 715–831) was more than double the existing estimate derived from sightings of females with young. Based on our results, the estimated known, human-caused mortality rate in 2004 was 4.6% (95% CI = 4.2–4.9%), slightly above the 4% considered sustainable; however, the high proportion of female mortalities raises concern. We used location data from telemetry, confirmed sightings, and genetic sampling to estimate occupied habitat. We found that grizzly bears occupied 33,480 km2 in the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem (NCDE) during 1994–2007, including 10,340 km2 beyond the Recovery Zone. We used factorial correspondence analysis to identify potential barriers to gene flow within this population. Our results suggested that genetic interchange recently increased in areas with low gene flow in the past; however, we also detected evidence of incipient fragmentation across the major transportation corridor in this ecosystem. Our results suggest that the NCDE population is faring better than previously thought, and they highlight the need for a more rigorous monitoring program. |
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Keywords: | abundance estimation genetic structure grizzly bear mark—recapture modeling noninvasive sampling Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem northwestern Montana population monitoring Ursus arctos. |
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