A test of the green wave hypothesis in omnivorous brown bears across North America

Author:

Bowersock Nathaniel R.1ORCID,Ciarniello Lana M.2,Deacy William W.3ORCID,Heard Doug C.45,Joly Kyle6ORCID,Lamb Clayton T.7ORCID,Leacock William B.8ORCID,McLellan Bruce N.9,Mowat Garth1011ORCID,Sorum Mathew S.6ORCID,van Manen Frank T.12ORCID,Merkle Jerod A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Zoology and Physiology, University of Wyoming Laramie WY USA

2. Aklak Wildlife Consulting Campbell River BC Canada

3. National Park Service, Arctic Network Fairbanks AK USA

4. British Columbia Ministry of Forests, Lands, and Natural Resource Operations Prince George BC Canada

5. Tithonus Wildlife Research Prince George BC Canada

6. National Park Service, Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve Fairbanks AK USA

7. Department of Biology, University of British Columbia Kelowna BC Canada

8. US Fish and Wildlife Service, Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Fairbanks AK USA

9. IUCN Bear Specialist Group D'Arcy BC Canada

10. Ministry of Forests, Fish and Wildlife Branch Nelson BC Canada

11. Department of Earth, Environmental and Geographic Sciences, University of British Columbia Kelowna BC Canada

12. US Geological Survey, Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center, Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team Bozeman MT USA

Abstract

Herbivorous animals tend to seek out plants at intermediate phenological states to improve energy intake while minimizing consumption of fibrous material. In some ecosystems, the timing of green‐up is heterogeneous and propagates across space in a wave‐like pattern, known as the green wave. Tracking the green wave allows individuals to prolong access to higher‐quality forage. While there is a plethora of empirical support for such behavior in herbivorous taxa, the green wave hypothesis (GWH) is nuanced based on factors such as body morphometrics and digestive capacity. Furthermore, little is known about whether other taxa, such as omnivores, track the green wave. Our objective was to assess whether the GWH can be extended to explain the movements of omnivores. Using GPS collar data from seven populations (n = 127 individuals) of brown bears Ursus arctos across their entire North American range, we first tested whether bears tracked the green wave. Using conditional resource selection functions (RSFs), we found that variation in proxies of vegetative forage quality better explained movement and habitat selection than proxies of forage biomass in over half of the bears in our study, providing evidence of green wave tracking. Second, we assess factors that explained variation in green wave tracking using linear mixed effects models. Green wave tracking in brown bears was explained by the variation in availability of green‐up within spring home ranges, and how green‐up transitioned across those home ranges. Our results demonstrate that the GWH can partially explain movement of a non‐migratory omnivorous species, extending the generality of the GWH as a broad predictor of animal space use. The green wave is another resource wave brown bears track, and our findings help predict brown bear space use, which can be used to guide conservation and habitat restoration efforts.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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