Black bear density and habitat use variation at the Sierra Nevada‐Great Basin Desert transition

Author:

Sultaire Sean M.1ORCID,Kawai‐Harada Yuki23,Kimmel Ashley24,Greeson Emily M.25,Jackson Patrick J.6,Contag Christopher H.235,Lackey Carl W.6,Beckmann Jon P.7,Millspaugh Joshua J.1,Montgomery Robert A.8

Affiliation:

1. Wildlife Biology Program University of Montana 32 Campus Drive Missoula MT 59812 USA

2. Institute for Quantitative Health Science and Engineering Michigan State University East Lansing MI USA

3. Department of Biomedical Engineering Michigan State University East Lansing MI USA

4. College of Veterinary Medicine Michigan State University East Lansing MI USA

5. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics Michigan State University East Lansing MI USA

6. Nevada Department of Wildlife 6980 Sierra Center Parkway, Suite 120 Reno NV 89511 USA

7. Wildlife Conservation Society Rockies Program 1050 E Main, Suite 2 Bozeman MT 59715 USA

8. Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Department of Zoology, The Recanati‐Kaplan Centre University of Oxford Tubney House, Abingdon Road Tubney Oxon OX13 5QL United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractIn the first 2 decades of the twenty‐first century, American black bear (Ursus americanus) populations rebounded with range expansions into areas where the species was previously extirpated. While there are a number of factors that limit range expansion, habitat quality and availability are among the most important. Such factors may be particularly important in western Nevada, USA, at the transition zone of the Sierra Nevada and the Great Basin Desert. We deployed a multi‐faceted data collection system including motion‐sensitive cameras, noninvasive hair sampling and genotyping, and global positioning system (GPS) tracking. We analyzed data using spatial capture‐recapture to estimate population density and dynamic occupancy models to estimate habitat use. Black bear habitat use and density were substantially higher in the Sierra Nevada than the Great Basin Desert and had strong positive relationships with the presence of conifer land cover in the transition zone. The average black bear density was >4 times higher in the mixed‐conifer forests of the Sierra Nevada (12.4 bears/100 km2) than in desert mountain ranges with piñon (Pinus monophylla)‐juniper (Juniperus spp.) woodland (2.7 bears/100 km2). The low‐elevation shrub and grassland portions of the study area had even lower estimated black bear density (0.6 bears/100 km2) and probability of use (0.03, 95% CI = 0.00–0.09). Across these spatially variable configurations in black bear density, we estimated the population size to be 418 individuals (95% CI = 239–740). Declining density towards the range edge, coupled with a relatively stable range of black bears in Nevada observed since 2000, suggests that further species range expansion into the western Great Basin may be limited by habitat quality and availability.

Funder

Nevada Department of Wildlife

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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