Info: Zenodo’s user support line is staffed on regular business days between Dec 23 and Jan 5. Response times may be slightly longer than normal.

Published July 3, 2019 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Moose movement rates are altered by wolf presence in two ecosystems

  • 1. University of Minnesota
  • 2. Minnesota Zoo

Description

Predators directly impact prey populations through lethal encounters, but understanding non-lethal, indirect effects is also critical because foraging animals often face tradeoffs between predator avoidance and energy intake. Quantifying these indirect effects can be difficult even when it is possible to monitor individuals that regularly interact. Our goal was to understand how movement and resource selection o a predator (wolves; Canis lupus) influences the movement behavior of a prey species (moose; Alces alces). We tested whether moose avoided areas with high predicted wolf resource use in two study areas with differing prey compositions, whether avoidance patterns varied seasonally, and whether daily activity budgets of moose and wolves aligned temporally. We deployed GPS-collars on both species at two sites in northern Minnesota. We created seasonal resource-selection functions (RSF) for wolves and modeled the relationship between moose first-passage time (FPT), a method that discerns alterations in movement rates, and wolf RSF values. Larger FPT values suggest rest/foraging, whereas shorter FPT values indicate travel/fleeing. We found that the movements of moose and wolves peaked at similar times of day in both study areas. Moose FPTs were 45% lower in areas most selected for by wolves relative to those avoided. The relationship between wolf RSF and moose FPT was nonlinear and varied seasonally. Differences in FPT between low and high RSF values were greatest in winter (-82.1%) and spring (-57.6%) in northeastern Minnesota and similar for all seasons in the Voyageurs National Park ecosystem. In northeastern Minnesota, where moose comprise a larger percentage of wolf diet, the relationship between moose FPT and wolf RSF was more pronounced (ave. across seasons: -60.1%) than the Voyageurs National Park ecosystem (-30.4%). These findings highlight the role wolves can play in determining moose behavior, whereby moose spend less time in areas with higher predicted likelihood of wolf resource selection.

Notes

Files

MooseFPT_data_Ditmer_070218.csv

Files (224.5 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:d050aaea94b5f1e4804c9b366d984abb
85.8 MB Preview Download
md5:91f6b29b09c92dd3cdb5a6c629acbd83
668 Bytes Preview Download
md5:e2557f30f012581ae75148aa326d2caf
886 Bytes Preview Download
md5:c694ce8d6498b85e579596658c41abed
585 Bytes Preview Download
md5:ca778c2955ca008c46f2a90ee507e1d2
137.1 MB Preview Download
md5:97c614a0805ea084876c46223179381b
1.6 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1002/ece3.4402 (DOI)