Crop, Native Vegetation, and Biofuels: Response of White- Tailed Deer to Changing Management Priorities
نویسندگان
چکیده
The expansion of the cellulosic biofuels industry throughout the United States has broad-scale implications for wildlife management on public and private lands. Knowledge is limited on the effects of reverting agriculture to native grass, and vice versa, on size of home range and habitat use of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus). We followed 68 radiocollared female deer from 1991 through 2004 that were residents of DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge (DNWR) in eastern Nebraska, USA. The refuge was undergoing conversion of vegetation out of row-crop agriculture and into native grass, forest, and emergent aquatic vegetation. Habitat in DNWR consisted of 30% crop in 1991 but removing crops to establish native grass and wetland habitat at DNWR resulted in a 44% reduction in crops by 2004. A decrease in the amount of crops on DNWR contributed to a decline in mean size of annual home range from 400 ha in 1991 to 200 ha in 2005 but percentage of crops in home ranges increased from 21% to 29%. Mean overlap for individuals was 77% between consecutive annual home ranges across 8 years, regardless of crop availability. Conversion of crop to native habitat will not likely result in home range abandonment but may impact disease transmission by increasing rates of contact between deer social groups that occupy adjacent areas. Future research on condition indices or changes in population parameters (e.g., recruitment) could be incorporated into the study design to assess impacts of habitat conversion for biofuel production. (JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT 73(3):339–344; 2009) DOI: 10.2193/2008-162
منابع مشابه
Assessing plant community composition fails to capture impacts of white-tailed deer on native and invasive plant species
Excessive herbivory can have transformative effects on forest understory vegetation, converting diverse communities into depauperate ones, often with increased abundance of non-native plants. White-tailed deer are a problematic herbivore throughout much of eastern North America and alter forest understory community structure. Reducing (by culling) or eliminating (by fencing) deer herbivory is e...
متن کاملSterilization as an alternative deer control technique: a review
JASON R. BOULANGER, Cornell University, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Department of Natural Resources, B20 Bruckner Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA [email protected] PAUL D. CURTIS, Cornell University, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Department of Natural Resources, B13 Bruckner Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA EVAN G. COOCH, Cornell University, College of Agriculture and Life Scie...
متن کاملThe effect of terrain and female density on survival of neonatal white‐tailed deer and mule deer fawns
Juvenile survival is a highly variable life-history trait that is critical to population growth. Antipredator tactics, including an animal's use of its physical and social environment, are critical to juvenile survival. Here, we tested the hypothesis that habitat and social characteristics influence coyote (Canis latrans) predation on white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) and mule deer (O....
متن کاملEffects of abundant white-tailed deer on vegetation, animals, mycorrhizal fungi, and soils
The last several decades have seen dramatic increases in ungulate populations worldwide, and whitetailed deer in the eastern United States currently exist at unprecedented densities in many areas. Numerous studies have demonstrated the effects of high densities of white-tailed deer on forest communities. However, few studies have simultaneously examined the effects of deer on multiple component...
متن کاملWhite-tailed deer attacking humans during the fawning season: a unique human–wildlife conflict on a university campus
Human–wildlife confl icts associated with suburban white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) populations have increased in the last 20 years. Primary threats to human health and safety associated with overabundant deer populations include deer–vehicle collisions, attacks on humans, disease, and damage to native and ornamental vegetation. During the fawning seasons (May–June) of 2005 and 2006, ...
متن کامل