Expansion of brown bears (Ursus arctos) into the eastern Alps: a spatially explicit population model
Authored by Thorsten Wiegand, F Knauer, P Kaczensky, J Naves
Date Published: 2004
DOI: 10.1023/b:bioc.0000004314.38828.db
Sponsors:
German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
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Abstract
We present a spatially explicit population model for analysing the
expansion of brown bears (Ursus arctos) after the reintroduction program
in central Austria. The model is based on field investigations into
brown bears in Austria and Slovenia and on current knowledge of brown
bears. The landscape of the eastern Alps is represented by a GIS-derived
raster map defining local habitat suitability and five major spatial
barriers to dispersal. The population model follows the fate of
individual bears and simulates reproduction, dispersal, home range
establishment, and mortality in annual time steps. We indirectly adjust
unknown or uncertain model parameters with 10-year data on the number of
females with cubs in central Austria and determine key variables of
population dynamics, such as population sizes and growth rates within
different population nuclei, dispersal distances, or mortality rates, for model parameterisations that reproduce the data on females with
cubs. We estimated a current (1996 - 2000) growth rate of the population
in Austria and adjacent parts of Italy of some 14\%; a high proportion
of this growth was due to immigration from Slovenia. Consequently, the
growth rate of the subpopulation in central Austria, which probably is
isolated functionally (i.e., no exchange of females) from the nuclei
along the Austrian - Slovenian border, yielded some 7\%. This
subpopulation may comprise seven residents, and we estimated for females
a 33\% risk of extinction during the 1992 - 2000 period. Validation and
confirmation of our model results with data on bear densities that were
not used for model construction and parameterisation supported our
findings. The high female mortality rates, together with the
vulnerability of the small population to chance events (i.e., demographic stochasticity), are the most pressing threat for the
population in the eastern Alps. Our approach could be widely applied for
analysing dynamics of rare and endangered species in which the paucity
of data precludes an appraisal of the state of the population using
standard methods.
Tags
Dynamics
Conservation
ecology
Extinction