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Selecting Habitat to Survive: The Impact of Road Density on Survival in a Large Carnivore

Habitat selection studies generally assume that animals select habitat and food resources at multiple scales to maximise their fitness. However, animals sometimes prefer habitats of apparently low quality, especially when considering the costs associated with spatially heterogeneous human disturbanc...

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Autores principales: Basille, Mathieu, Van Moorter, Bram, Herfindal, Ivar, Martin, Jodie, Linnell, John D. C., Odden, John, Andersen, Reidar, Gaillard, Jean-Michel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3707854/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23874381
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065493
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author Basille, Mathieu
Van Moorter, Bram
Herfindal, Ivar
Martin, Jodie
Linnell, John D. C.
Odden, John
Andersen, Reidar
Gaillard, Jean-Michel
author_facet Basille, Mathieu
Van Moorter, Bram
Herfindal, Ivar
Martin, Jodie
Linnell, John D. C.
Odden, John
Andersen, Reidar
Gaillard, Jean-Michel
author_sort Basille, Mathieu
collection PubMed
description Habitat selection studies generally assume that animals select habitat and food resources at multiple scales to maximise their fitness. However, animals sometimes prefer habitats of apparently low quality, especially when considering the costs associated with spatially heterogeneous human disturbance. We used spatial variation in human disturbance, and its consequences on lynx survival, a direct fitness component, to test the Hierarchical Habitat Selection hypothesis from a population of Eurasian lynx Lynx lynx in southern Norway. Data from 46 lynx monitored with telemetry indicated that a high proportion of forest strongly reduced the risk of mortality from legal hunting at the home range scale, while increasing road density strongly increased such risk at the finer scale within the home range. We found hierarchical effects of the impact of human disturbance, with a higher road density at a large scale reinforcing its negative impact at a fine scale. Conversely, we demonstrated that lynx shifted their habitat selection to avoid areas with the highest road densities within their home ranges, thus supporting a compensatory mechanism at fine scale enabling lynx to mitigate the impact of large-scale disturbance. Human impact, positively associated with high road accessibility, was thus a stronger driver of lynx space use at a finer scale, with home range characteristics nevertheless constraining habitat selection. Our study demonstrates the truly hierarchical nature of habitat selection, which aims at maximising fitness by selecting against limiting factors at multiple spatial scales, and indicates that scale-specific heterogeneity of the environment is driving individual spatial behaviour, by means of trade-offs across spatial scales.
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spelling pubmed-37078542013-07-19 Selecting Habitat to Survive: The Impact of Road Density on Survival in a Large Carnivore Basille, Mathieu Van Moorter, Bram Herfindal, Ivar Martin, Jodie Linnell, John D. C. Odden, John Andersen, Reidar Gaillard, Jean-Michel PLoS One Research Article Habitat selection studies generally assume that animals select habitat and food resources at multiple scales to maximise their fitness. However, animals sometimes prefer habitats of apparently low quality, especially when considering the costs associated with spatially heterogeneous human disturbance. We used spatial variation in human disturbance, and its consequences on lynx survival, a direct fitness component, to test the Hierarchical Habitat Selection hypothesis from a population of Eurasian lynx Lynx lynx in southern Norway. Data from 46 lynx monitored with telemetry indicated that a high proportion of forest strongly reduced the risk of mortality from legal hunting at the home range scale, while increasing road density strongly increased such risk at the finer scale within the home range. We found hierarchical effects of the impact of human disturbance, with a higher road density at a large scale reinforcing its negative impact at a fine scale. Conversely, we demonstrated that lynx shifted their habitat selection to avoid areas with the highest road densities within their home ranges, thus supporting a compensatory mechanism at fine scale enabling lynx to mitigate the impact of large-scale disturbance. Human impact, positively associated with high road accessibility, was thus a stronger driver of lynx space use at a finer scale, with home range characteristics nevertheless constraining habitat selection. Our study demonstrates the truly hierarchical nature of habitat selection, which aims at maximising fitness by selecting against limiting factors at multiple spatial scales, and indicates that scale-specific heterogeneity of the environment is driving individual spatial behaviour, by means of trade-offs across spatial scales. Public Library of Science 2013-07-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3707854/ /pubmed/23874381 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065493 Text en © 2013 Basille et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Basille, Mathieu
Van Moorter, Bram
Herfindal, Ivar
Martin, Jodie
Linnell, John D. C.
Odden, John
Andersen, Reidar
Gaillard, Jean-Michel
Selecting Habitat to Survive: The Impact of Road Density on Survival in a Large Carnivore
title Selecting Habitat to Survive: The Impact of Road Density on Survival in a Large Carnivore
title_full Selecting Habitat to Survive: The Impact of Road Density on Survival in a Large Carnivore
title_fullStr Selecting Habitat to Survive: The Impact of Road Density on Survival in a Large Carnivore
title_full_unstemmed Selecting Habitat to Survive: The Impact of Road Density on Survival in a Large Carnivore
title_short Selecting Habitat to Survive: The Impact of Road Density on Survival in a Large Carnivore
title_sort selecting habitat to survive: the impact of road density on survival in a large carnivore
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3707854/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23874381
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065493
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