Environmental dynamics and anthropogenic development alter philopatry and space‐use in a North American cervid

Item Metadata

Dublin Core

Title

Environmental dynamics and anthropogenic development alter philopatry and space‐use in a North American cervid

Description

Aim

The space an animal uses over a given time period must provide the resources required for meeting energetic needs, reproducing and avoiding predation. Anthropogenic landscape change in concert with environmental dynamics can strongly structure space-use. Investigating these dynamics can provide critical insight into animal ecology, conservation and management.

Location

The Piceance Basin, Colorado, USA.

Methods

We applied a novel utilization distribution estimation technique based on a continuous-time correlated random walk model to characterize range dynamics of mule deer during winter and summer seasons across multiple years. This approach leverages second-order properties of movement to provide a probabilistic estimate of space-use. We assessed the influence of environmental (cover and forage), individual and anthropogenic factors on interannual variation in range use of individual deer using a hierarchical Bayesian regression framework.

Results

Mule deer demonstrated remarkable spatial philopatry, with a median of 50% overlap (range: 8–78%) in year-to-year utilization distributions. Environmental conditions were the primary driver of both philopatry and range size, with anthropogenic disturbance playing a secondary role.

Main conclusions

Philopatry in mule deer is suspected to reflect the importance of spatial familiarity (memory) to this species and, therefore, factors driving spatial displacement are of conservation concern. The interaction between range behaviour and dynamics in development disturbance and environmental conditions highlights mechanisms by which anthropogenic environmental change may displace deer from familiar areas and alter their foraging and survival strategies.

Bibliographic Citation

Northrup, J. M., C. R. Anderson Jr, and G. Wittemyer. 2016. Environmental dynamics and anthropogenic development alter philopatry and space‐use in a North American cervid. Diversity and Distributions 22:547–557. https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.12417

Creator

Northrup, Joseph M.
Anderson Jr, Charles R.
Wittemyer, George

Subject

Animal movement
Energy development
Home range
Odocoileus hemionus
Utilization distribution

Extent

11 pages

Date Created

2016-01-05

Type

Article

Format

application/pdf

Language

English

Is Part Of

Diversity and Distributions

Collection

Citation

Northrup, Joseph M., Anderson Jr, Charles R., and Wittemyer, George, “Environmental dynamics and anthropogenic development alter philopatry and space‐use in a North American cervid,” CPW Digital Collections, accessed April 25, 2024, https://cpw.cvlcollections.org/items/show/108.