An individual-based model for southern Lake Superior wolves: A tool to explore the effect of human-caused mortality on a landscape of risk
Authored by Jennifer L Stenglein, Jonathan H Gilbert, Adrian P Wydeven, Deelen Timothy R Van
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2015.01.022
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Abstract
Gray wolves (Canis lupus) have complex life-histories due, in part, to
mating systems that depend on intra-group dominance hierarchies set
within an inter-group (pack) social structure linked to philopatric
territories. In addition to this spatially oriented social structure, mortality risk associated with interactions with humans varies
spatially. We developed an individual-based spatially explicit (IBSE)
model for the southern Lake Superior wolf population to better capture
the life-history of wolves in a harvest model. Simulated wolves
underwent an annual cycle of life-history stage-dependent mate-finding, dispersal, reproduction, and aging on a simulated landscape reflecting
spatially explicit state and water boundaries, Indian reservation
boundaries and ceded territories, wolf harvest zones, livestock
depredation areas, and a spatial mortality risk surface. The latter 3
surfaces were linked to mortality events for simulated wolves. We
assessed our IBSE model and conducted a sensitivity analysis of the most
uncertain parameters with a categorical calibration of patterns observed
at the individual, pack, population, and landscape level. We found that
without recreational harvest, the Wisconsin wolf population grew to an
average carrying capacity of 1242 wolves after 50 years and breeding
pairs persisted for a mean 1.8 years. We simulated 6 recreational
harvest scenarios with varying rates and timings of harvest and assessed
effects on population size, pack sizes, age ratios, dispersal and
immigration rates, and breeding pair tenures of the Wisconsin wolf
population. The simulated harvest with rates of 14\% which corresponded
to the 2012 harvest in Wisconsin reduced the populations 4\% in the
first year of harvest and equilibrated to the pre-harvest population
size after 20 years of harvest, on average. A 30\% harvest rate across
the simulation on average reduced the populations by 65\% after 20 years
with some populations going extinct before 100 years. In general, harvest increased the proportion of pups in the simulated populations
and decreased breeding pair tenure. Targeted lethal control was more
effective than harvest for reducing the number of wolves near known
livestock depredation sites. Our model facilitates prediction of
important population patterns that is simultaneously dependent on
complexities associated with spatially structured life history and
mortality. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Management
Dynamics
Spatially explicit
ecology
Strategies
Populations
Computer-simulation
Protocol
Social-structure
Yellowstone