Habitat loss on seasonal migratory range imperils an endangered ungulate

  • Sara H. Williams
  • , Robin Steenweg
  • , Troy Hegel
  • , Mike Russell
  • , Dave Hervieux
  • , Mark Hebblewhite

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Scopus citations

Abstract

1. Endangered species policies and their associated recovery documents and management actions do not always sufficiently address the importance of migratory behaviour and seasonal ranges for imperilled populations. 2. Using a telemetry location dataset spanning 1981–2018, we tested for changes in prevalence of migratory tactics (resident, migrant) over time, switching between tactics, shifts in seasonal space use including migration corridors, and survival consequences of migrant and resident tactics for 237 adult female endangered woodland mountain caribou in one population in western Canada. 3. Over more than three decades, the proportion of individuals displaying annual migration to the low elevation forested winter range declined from nearly 100%–38%. Correspondingly, there was a strong switch away from being migrant to being year-round residents at high elevation. 4. These behavioural changes corresponded to abandonment of low elevation winter ranges in association with increasing levels of anthropogenic land uses, including forestry and oil and gas developments. Furthermore, there were no identifiable migration corridors to target for migratory route protection. 5. These shifts translated to lower survival rates, particularly for caribou demonstrating resident tactics, consistent with recent declines of the caribou population. That migrants switched to residency in their largely undisturbed summer range, despite lower survival, indicates maladaptive habitat selection consistent with recent patterns of mountain caribou extirpations. 6. Globally, endangered species policies and their associated recovery plans and management actions often do not explicitly consider the challenge of protecting migratory species. Effective conservation of migratory species requires protecting critical habitats needed for the entire life history of the species, including all seasonal ranges and migratory habitat.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere12039
JournalEcological Solutions and Evidence
Volume2
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2021

Funding

Funding was provided by Government of Alberta, the Arctic Boreal Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE) program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) grant (#NNX15AW71A) to M.H. and the University of Montana. We thank comments from one anonymous reviewer, the associate editor, C. Lamb, and H. Sawyer that greatly improved the manuscript.

FundersFunder number
National Aeronautics and Space Administration15AW71A
Government of Alberta

    Keywords

    • Ecological trap
    • Rangier tarandus caribou
    • habitat loss
    • migration
    • survival
    • woodland caribou

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