Human disturbance in riparian areas disrupts predator–prey interactions between grizzly bears and salmon

Author:

Adams Megan S.1234ORCID,Levi Taal5,Bourbonnais Mathieu6,Service Christina N.178ORCID,Artelle Kyle1269,Bryan Heather12310,Paquet Paul12,Nelson Trisalyn11,Darimont Chris T.123

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography University of Victoria Victoria British Columbia Canada

2. Raincoast Conservation Foundation Sidney British Columbia Canada

3. Hakai Institute Campbell River British Columbia Canada

4. Central Coast Indigenous Resource Alliance Campbell River British Columbia Canada

5. Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA

6. Department of Earth, Environmental and Geographic Sciences University of British Columbia Okanagan Kelowna British Columbia Canada

7. Kitasoo Xai'xais Stewardship Authority, Kitasoo Xai'xais First Nation Klemtu British Columbia Canada

8. School of Environmental Studies University of Victoria Victoria British Columbia Canada

9. Department of Environmental Biology, and Center for Native Peoples and the Environment State University of New York, College of Environmental Science and Forestry Syracuse New York USA

10. Department of Ecosystem Science and Management University of Northern British Columbia Prince George British Columbia Canada

11. Department of Geography University of California Santa Barbara Santa Barbara California USA

Abstract

AbstractWildlife must increasingly balance trade‐offs between the need to access important foods and the mortality risks associated with human‐dominated landscapes. Human disturbance can profoundly influence wildlife behavior, but managers know little about the relationship between disturbance–behavior dynamics and associated consequences for foraging. We address this gap by empirically investigating the consequences of human activity on a keystone predator–prey interaction in a region with limited but varied industrial disturbance. Using stable isotope data from 226 hair samples of grizzly bears (Ursus arctos horribilis) collected from 1995 to 2014 across 22 salmon‐bearing watersheds (88,000 km2) in British Columbia, Canada, we examined how human activity influenced their consumption of spawning salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.), a fitness‐related food. Accounting for the abundance of salmon and other foods, salmon consumption strongly decreased (up to 59% for females) with increasing human disturbance (as measured by the human footprint index) in riparian zones of salmon‐bearing rivers. Declines in salmon consumption occurred with disturbance even in watersheds with low footprints. In a region currently among the least influenced by industrial activity, intensification of disturbance in river valleys is predicted to increasingly decouple bears from salmon, possibly driving associated reductions in population productivity and provisioning of salmon nutrients to terrestrial ecosystems. Accordingly, we draw on our results to make landscape‐scale and access‐related management recommendations beyond current streamside protection buffers. This work illustrates the interaction between habitat modification and food security for wildlife, highlighting the potential for unacknowledged interactions and cumulative effects in increasingly modified landscapes.

Funder

Wilburforce Foundation

Mitacs

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

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