Survival on the border: a population model to evaluate management options for Norway's wolves Canis lupus
Authored by Atle Mysterud, Joseph Bull, Erlend B Nilsen, E J Milner-Gulland
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.2981/08-010
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
We present in individual-based model of the Norwegian wolf Canis lupus
population, which is used to evaluate the effectiveness of current and
potential management policies in fulfilling the Norwegian Government's
stated aim of maintaining three breeding packs within a designated wolf
zone. The model estimates the `functional extinction rate' of the
population, defined as the proportion of years in which breeding wolf
packs are absent. Under the current conditions according to estimates
from Scandinavia, with observed values of natural survival rates (0.903)
and unauthorised mortality (0.203) and allowing for immigration from
Sweden, the model predicts that the probability of functional extinction
is as low as 0.07. This output variable is highly sensitive to the
demographic parameters, and if alternative estimates of natural survival
rates (0.73 for cubs and 0.83 for adults) reported for wolves elsewhere
and higher rates of unauthorised mortality (0.4) are utilised, the
functional extinction rate is 0.67 +/- 0.15, and the population is
dependent on maintenance by immigration from Sweden. The main
determinants of the functional extinction rate are file unauthorised
mortality rate and the immigration rate from Sweden. The Scandinavian
population as a whole shows a rapid non-linear increase in probability
of extinction at unauthorised mortality rates >0.10. Varying levels of
the current management interventions (increasing the size of the wolf
zone and target number of packs) are ineffective only when the
Unauthorised mortality rate falls below 0.30 is a self-sustaining
Population in Norway able to establish. An adaptive harvest policy with
culls targeted only at dispersing animals, or taking place only when the
population exceeds a threshold level, could be sustainable if the
Unauthorised mortality rate is reduced. The fact that the Norwegian
Government has been explicit about its management strategy and
objectives has allowed us to test the ability of this strategy to meet
the objectives, and we have shown that it is dependant upon maintaining
the current circumstances alongside a high adult survival rate to be
able to do so. Given the potentially critical role of the Swedish
population in Sustaining Norway's wolves, there is a strong case for
joint management of the Scandinavian population. These insights are
likely to be relevant for the management of other species living across
geopolitical boundaries.
Tags
Dynamics
Viability
Conservation
Wolf
Dispersal
Prey
Harvesting strategies
Large carnivores