Reproductive den selection and its consequences for fisher neonates, a cavity-obligate mustelid

Author:

Matthews Sean M1ORCID,Green David S1,Higley J Mark2,Rennie Kerry M2,Kelsey Caylen M2,Green Rebecca E2

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Natural Resources, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, USA

2. Wildlife Department, Hoopa Tribal Forestry, Hoopa, CA, USA

Abstract

AbstractSelection of habitat characteristics by reproductive females during neonate development can mediate the influence of adverse environmental conditions on the fitness of offspring. Previous research has suggested that cavities and burrows used for reproduction by cavity-obligate species offer thermoregulatory benefits, access to prey, and can limit predation pressure. As fishers (Pekania pennanti) are secondary cavity-obligate breeders, we hypothesized that they select particular characteristics of reproductive den cavities at discrete stages of offspring development to mediate adverse biotic and environmental effects on their neonates. To test our hypothesis, we located 406 reproductive dens and 154 cavity rest sites used by 65 individual adult female fishers during 11 reproductive seasons (2005–2016) in northwestern California. We counted 53 (27 F, 26 M) kits in 31 litters born to 19 females during six of these reproductive seasons. The weight of kits varied significantly by sex and by age, whereas the length of kits varied only by age, suggesting that adult females in this population might be preferentially investing in male kits. We found that natal and early-maternal dens buffered minimum temperatures significantly more than late-maternal dens and cavities used during the nonreproductive season. A male fisher skull was also less likely to fit through the cavity openings of natal dens than through the openings of cavities used by adult females during the nonreproductive season. Litter survival was significantly lower at natal dens than at late-maternal dens. The age of adult female fishers did not affect the probability of litter survival. Our results emphasize the vulnerability of vertebrate offspring during early developmental periods and how cavity-obligate species select cavities to mediate environmental conditions during reproduction.

Funder

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Tribal Wildlife Grants Program

Yreka and Arcata Field Offices of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Children and Families Administration for Native Americans

U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station Redwood Sciences Laboratory

California Department of Fish and Game Nongame Program

California Department of Fish and Wildlife State Wildlife Grant Program

Hoopa Valley Tribe

Wildlife Conservation Society

Integral Ecology Research Center

Humboldt County Fish and Game Advisory Commission

Humboldt State University Department of Wildlife

University of California Davis

University of Massachusetts Amherst Environmental Conservation Program

Patagonia Environmental Grants Program

Wildlife Conservation Society Wildlife Action Opportunities Fund

Doris Duke Charitable Foundation; Volgenau Foundation

JiJi Foundation

Unisense Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference83 articles.

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2. Precision and utility of cementum annuli for estimating ages of fishers;Arthur;Wildlife Society Bulletin,1992

3. Meta-analyses of habitat selection by fishers at resting sites in the Pacific coastal region;Aubry;The Journal of Wildlife Management,2013

4. Selection of rest structures and microsites by fishers in Oregon;Aubry;Journal of Wildlife Management,2018

5. Sustaining cavity-using species: patterns of cavity use and implications to forest management;Bunnell;ISRN Forestry,2013

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