Abstract
Populations along geographical range limits are often exposed to unsuitable climate and low resource availability relative to core populations. As such, there has been a renewed focus on understanding the factors that determine range limits to better predict how species will respond to global change. Using recent theory on range limits and classical understanding of density dependence, we evaluated the influence of resource availability on the snowshoe hare Lepus americanus along its trailing range edge. We estimated variation in population density, habitat use, survival, and parasite loads to test the Great Escape Hypothesis (GEH), i.e. that density dependence determines, in part, a species' persistence along trailing edges. We found that variability in resource availability affected density and population fluctuations and led to trade-offs in survival for snowshoe hare populations in the northeastern USA. Hares living in resource-limited environments had lower and less variable population density, yet higher survival and lower parasitism compared to populations living in resource-rich environments. We suggest that density-dependent dynamics, elicited by resource availability, provide hares a unique survival advantage and partly explain persistence along their trailing edge. We hypothesize that this low-density escape from predation and parasitism occurs for other prey species along trailing edges, but the extent to which it occurs is likely conditional on the quality of matrix habitat. Our work indicates that biotic factors play an important role in shaping species' trailing edges and more detailed examination of non-climatic factors is warranted to better inform conservation and management decisions.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | e06633 |
| Journal | Ecography |
| Volume | 2023 |
| Issue number | 8 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Aug 2023 |
Funding
– We thank the editor, J. Litvaitis, B. Zuckerberg, J. Pauli, and 2 anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments on this paper. We also thank agency biologists from New Hampshire Fish and Game (NHFG), US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), and US Forest Service (USFS) for assistance with this project. We would specifically like to thank A. Newell, K. Courtot, and numerous other technicians that assisted with the project. Any use of trade, firm, or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the US Government. – This research was funded by the Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center, which is managed by the USGS National Climate Adaptation Science Center. Additional funding was provided by 1) a CFDA grant (15.678) administered by the USFWS via a Cooperative Agreement Award (no. F16AC00435) to the University of Massachusetts (UMass); 2) a Challenge Cost Share Agreement (no. 14-CS-11092200-019) between the USFS and NHFG; 3) a Dissertation Fieldwork Grant awarded to APKS by the UMass Graduate School, 4) generous support from backers of an Experiment award to APKS and MZ (DOI: 10.18258/10737) and 5) a National Science Foundation grant DEB-1907022 to LSM. – This research was funded by the Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center, which is managed by the USGS National Climate Adaptation Science Center. Additional funding was provided by 1) a CFDA grant (15.678) administered by the USFWS via a Cooperative Agreement Award (no. F16AC00435) to the University of Massachusetts (UMass); 2) a Challenge Cost Share Agreement (no. 14‐CS‐11092200‐019) between the USFS and NHFG; 3) a Dissertation Fieldwork Grant awarded to APKS by the UMass Graduate School, 4) generous support from backers of an Experiment award to APKS and MZ (DOI: 10.18258/10737) and 5) a National Science Foundation grant DEB‐1907022 to LSM.
| Funders | Funder number |
|---|---|
| 15.678 | |
| DEB‐1907022 | |
| F16AC00435 | |
| U.S. Forest Service-Retired | |
| University of Massachusetts Boston | 14‐CS‐11092200‐019 |
Keywords
- Lepus americanus
- climate change
- density dependence
- predation
- range-limits
- resource availability