Classifying the effects of human disturbance on denning polar bears

Author:

Woodruff SP1,Andersen EM1,Wilson RR1,Mangipane LS1,Miller SB1,Klein KJ12,Lemons PR1

Affiliation:

1. US Fish and Wildlife Service, Anchorage, AK 99503, USA

2. Bureau of Energy and Ocean Management, Anchorage, AK 99503, USA

Abstract

Climate change is resulting in decreased sea ice extent and increased industrial activity in Arctic regions. In northern Alaska, USA, sea ice loss has increased the frequency of land-based polar bear Ursus maritimus maternal dens, leading to greater potential for overlap between industrial activities and denning bears. Responses of denning bears to human disturbance could result in costly reproductive outcomes, although observation of these responses is logistically challenging and expensive. We developed a method to standardize the process of classifying the response of denning polar bears to disturbance using decision rules based on polar bear biology and denning chronology. We applied this method to 46 maternal polar bear dens exposed to human activity (e.g. vehicle traffic, ground-based monitoring). Because the timing of disturbance influences the response and subsequent fitness consequences, we determined outcomes specific to 4 denning periods: (1) den establishment (excavation to cub birth); (2) early denning (cub birth to 60 d old); (3) late denning (60 d old to emergence); and (4) post-emergence (emergence to den site departure). We classified the outcomes of 79 exposures as 37 having ‘no documented effect’ (no observed response), 7 as ‘behavioral’ (observed behavioral disruption), 17 as ‘early emergence’ (den emergence occurring earlier than an undisturbed emergence), 14 as ‘early departure’ (den site abandonment post-emergence earlier than if undisturbed), and 4 as ‘cub mortality’ (death or abandonment of ≥1 cub). Outcomes with potential fitness consequences occurred in every denning period. Our classification method facilitated a standardized approach that can be used to classify the outcome of den disturbance. Determining outcomes in relation to a specific denning period may facilitate improved implementation of mitigation strategies to reduce disturbance to denning bears.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology

Reference114 articles.

1. Human Disturbances of Denning Polar Bears in Alaska

2. Amstrup SC (2003) Polar bear: Ursus maritimus. In: Feldhamer G, Thompson B, Chapman J (eds) Wild mammals of North America: biology, management, and conservation. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD, p 587-610

3. Polar Bear Maternity Denning in the Beaufort Sea

4. Detecting Denning Polar Bears with Forward-Looking Infrared (FLIR) Imagery

5. The Effects of Prolonged Fasting of the Body Composition and Reproductive Success of Female Polar Bears (Ursus maritimus)

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