Landscape of fear or landscape of food? Moose hunting triggers an antipredator response in brown bears

Author:

Brown Ludovick1,Zedrosser Andreas23,Arnemo Jon M.45,Fuchs Boris4,Kindberg Jonas56,Pelletier Fanie1

Affiliation:

1. Département de biologie Université de Sherbrooke Sherbrooke Canada

2. Department of Natural Sciences and Environmental Health University of South‐Eastern Norway Bø in Telemark Norway

3. Institute for Wildlife Biology and Game Management University for Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna Austria

4. Department of Forestry and Wildlife Management Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences Koppang Norway

5. Department of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Umeå Sweden

6. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research Trondheim Norway

Abstract

AbstractHunters can affect the behavior of wildlife by inducing a landscape of fear, selecting individuals with specific traits, or altering resource availability across the landscape. Most research investigating the influence of hunting on wildlife resource selection has focused on target species and less attention has been devoted to nontarget species, such as scavengers that can be both attracted or repelled by hunting activities. We used resource selection functions to identify areas where hunters were most likely to kill moose (Alces alces) in south‐central Sweden during the fall. Then, we used step‐selection functions to determine whether female brown bears (Ursus arctos) selected or avoided these areas and specific resources during the moose hunting season. We found that, during both day and nighttime, female brown bears avoided areas where hunters were more likely to kill moose. We found evidence that resource selection by brown bears varied substantially during the fall and that some behavioral changes were consistent with disturbance associated with moose hunters. Brown bears were more likely to select concealed locations in young (i.e., regenerating) and coniferous forests and areas further away from roads during the moose hunting season. Our results suggest that brown bears react to both spatial and temporal variations in apparent risk during the fall: moose hunters create a landscape of fear and trigger an antipredator response in a large carnivore even if bears are not specifically targeted during the moose hunting season. Such antipredator responses might lead to indirect habitat loss and lower foraging efficiency and the resulting consequences should be considered when planning hunting seasons.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

Canada Research Chairs

Canadian Wildlife Federation

Miljødirektoratet

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Naturvårdsverket

Svenska Jägareförbundet

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology

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