Published July 11, 2019 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Alaskan brown bears (Ursus arctos) aggregate and display fidelity to foraging neighborhoods while preying on Pacific salmon along small streams

  • 1. University of Washington
  • 2. University of Idaho

Description

The interaction between brown bears (Ursus arctos) and Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) is important to the population dynamics of both species and a celebrated example of consumer-mediated nutrient transport. Yet, much of the site-specific information we have about the bears in this relationship comes from observations at a few highly visible but unrepresentative locations and a small number of radio-telemetry studies. Consequently, our understanding of brown bear abundance and behavior at more cryptic locations where they commonly feed on salmon, including small spawning streams, remains limited. We employed a non-invasive genetic approach (barbed wire hair snares) over four summers (2012-2015) to document patterns of brown bear abundance and movement among six spawning streams for sockeye salmon, O. nerka, in southwestern Alaska. The streams were grouped into two trios on opposite sides of Lake Aleknagik. Thus, we predicted that most bears would forage within only one trio during the spawning season because of the energetic costs associated with swimming between them or traveling around the lake, and show fidelity to particular trios across years because of the benefits of familiarity with local salmon dynamics and stream characteristics. Huggins closed-capture models based on encounter histories from genotyped hair samples revealed that as many as 41 individuals visited single streams during the annual six-week sampling season. Bears also moved freely among trios of streams but rarely moved between these putative foraging neighborhoods, either during or between years. By implication, even small salmon spawning streams can serve as important resources for brown bears, and consistent use of stream neighborhoods by certain bears may play an important role in spatially structuring coastal bear populations. Our findings also underscore the efficacy of non-invasive hair snagging and genetic analysis for examining bear abundance and movements at relatively fine spatial and temporal scales.

Notes

Files

2013 bears v2.csv

Files (16.6 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:99bc8a84865b26dd46e96d6c5eda9026
1.8 kB Preview Download
md5:84557399a48fdd3b7711106969803f5b
1.5 kB Preview Download
md5:666338f1212ad34630b9ab0f1f033af9
2.6 kB Preview Download
md5:2a75cabc95c810379d8ce78bf118e515
3.7 kB Download
md5:436384dce8cfc8f0188c12bf45aeff25
3.3 kB Download
md5:27ba881d43f21f4cc42a050d555d2e37
3.7 kB Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1002/ece3.4431 (DOI)