Affiliation:
1. Centre d’étude de la forêt, Université Laval, 2405, rue de la Terrasse, Québec, QC G1V 0A6, Canada.
Abstract
Deep snow can reduce accessibility to vegetation and cover by herbivores by blanketing understory cover, yet simultaneously increase access to foliage at higher levels. Thus, snow depth fluctuation should lead to spatiotemporal variation in herbivore habitat use. We measured shifts in habitat use by snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus Erxleben, 1777) as a function of snow depth in an eastern Canadian boreal forest where snow depth often exceeds 1 m. We hypothesized that as snow accumulates, snowshoe hares shift from locations with dense vegetation just above ground to locations with dense vegetation higher above ground. We surveyed 58 km of transects over three winters and found 1954 hare tracks. We analyzed track counts as a response to a density index of low vegetation (0–1.5 m above ground), high vegetation (2–4 m above ground), predator tracks, and snow depth. We found more hare tracks in sites with dense high vegetation when snow was deeper, and more hare tracks in sites with dense low vegetation when snow was shallower. Predator track presence did not influence responses to snow depth. Snow depth dynamics can drive hare distribution, and in turn, introduce uncertainty in spatial distribution models for the species and possibly its interactions with predators.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Reference43 articles.
1. Apps, C.D. 1999. Space-use, diet, demographics, and topographic association of lynx in the southern Canadian Rocky Mountains: a study. In Ecology and conservation of lynx in the United States. Edited by L.F.A. Ruggiero. University Press of Colorado, Boulder. pp. 351–371.
2. Ecological factors influencing the spatial pattern of Canada lynx relative to its southern range edge in Alberta, Canada
3. Does predation risk affect habitat use in snowshoe hares?
4. Spatial and temporal variability of Canadian monthly snow depths, 1946–1995
5. Brown, R.D., and Brasnett, B. 2010. Canadian Meteorological Centre (CMC) daily snow depth analysis data. Version 1. NASA National Snow Ice Data Center Distributed Active Archive Center, Boulder, Colo. 10.5067/W9FOYWH0EQZ3.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献