Effects of selective harvest of non-lactating females on chamois population dynamics
Authored by Marco Rughetti, Marco Festa-Bianchet
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.12265
Sponsors:
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
1. In large mammals, regulations or hunter preference often lead to
selective harvest of non-lactating females, with unknown impacts upon
population growth. Because female survival has very high elasticity
effects on population growth, an assessment of the magnitude and
selectivity of female harvest is crucial to understand population
dynamics of sport-hunted ungulates. Hunting accounts for most mortality
of adult chamois Rupicapra rupicapra and regulations typically
discourage the harvest of lactating females as orphaned kids have
reduced survival rates.
2. We used an individual-based model, produced from empirical data, to
explore the effects of selective removal of non-lactating females on
chamois population dynamics.
3. Harvest intensity had much stronger effects on female population
dynamics than selectivity for reproductive status. Selective harvest of
non-lactating females had very weak effects on population size and then
only at a high harvest rate and under strong selectivity. Assuming no
difference in winter survival between orphaned and non-orphaned kids, harvest of non-lactating females decreased population size at
equilibrium compared to a random female harvest, whereas the opposite
was true when assuming 50\% lower survival of orphaned kids.
4. Selective harvest of non-lactating females may avoid the negative
effects of orphaning on juvenile survival, but increases mortality of
pre-reproductive females that normally enjoy high survival and have high
reproductive value.
5. Synthesis and applications. The impact of selective harvest of
non-lactating females upon population dynamics is likely to be more
affected by the age structure of lactating and non-lactating females
rather than by the survival of orphan and non-orphan juveniles. High
harvest of pre-reproductive females has undesirable effects on
population dynamics, which must be considered alongside any cultural
preferences of hunters when developing hunting regulations or policies.
Tags
growth
Consequences
Survival
Age
Reproduction
White-tailed deer
Moose alces-alces
Large herbivores
Rupicapra-pyrenaica
Hunting mortality