Indirect effects of bear hunting: a review from Scandinavia

IF 0.6 4区 生物学 Q4 ZOOLOGY
Ursus Pub Date : 2017-11-01 DOI:10.2192/URSU-D-16-00028.1
S. Frank, A. Ordiz, Jacinthe Gosselin, A. Hertel, J. Kindberg, Martin Leclerc, F. Pelletier, S. Steyaert, O. Støen, Joanie Van de Walle, A. Zedrosser, J. Swenson
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引用次数: 32

Abstract

Abstract:  Harvest by means of hunting is a commonly used tool in large carnivore management. To evaluate the effects of harvest on populations, managers usually focus on numerical or immediate direct demographic effects of harvest mortality on a population's size and growth. However, we suggest that managers should also give consideration to indirect and potential evolutionary effects of hunting (e.g., the consequences of a change in the age, sex, and social structure), and their effects on population growth rate. We define “indirect effects” as hunting-induced changes in a population, including human-induced selection, that result in an additive change to the population growth rate “lambda” beyond that due to the initial offtake from direct mortality. We considered 4 major sources of possible indirect effects from hunting of bears: (1) changes to a population's age and sex structure, (2) changes to a population's social structure, (3) changes in individual behavior, and (4) human-induced selection. We identified empirically supported, as well as expected, indirect effects of hunting based primarily on >30 years of research on the Scandinavian brown bear (Ursus arctos) population. We stress that some indirect effects have been documented (e.g., habitat use and daily activity patterns of bears change when hunting seasons start, and changes in male social structure induce sexually selected infanticide and reduce population growth). Other effects may be more difficult to document and quantify in wild bear populations (e.g., how a younger age structure in males may lead to decreased offspring survival). We suggest that managers of bear and other large carnivore populations adopt a precautionary approach and assume that indirect effects do exist, have a potential impact on population structure, and, ultimately, may have an effect on population growth that differs from that predicted by harvest models based on direct effects alone.
猎熊的间接影响:来自斯堪的纳维亚半岛的回顾
摘要:狩猎采收是大型食肉动物管理中常用的一种手段。为了评估收获对人口的影响,管理人员通常关注收获死亡率对人口规模和增长的数字或直接人口统计学影响。然而,我们建议管理者也应该考虑狩猎的间接和潜在的进化效应(例如,年龄、性别和社会结构变化的后果),以及它们对人口增长率的影响。我们将“间接影响”定义为狩猎引起的种群变化,包括人类引起的选择,导致种群增长率“lambda”的附加变化超出了由于直接死亡率的初始减少而导致的变化。我们考虑了捕猎熊可能产生的间接影响的4个主要来源:(1)种群年龄和性别结构的变化,(2)种群社会结构的变化,(3)个体行为的变化,以及(4)人为选择。基于对斯堪的纳维亚棕熊(Ursus arctos)种群超过30年的研究,我们确定了经验支持和预期的狩猎间接影响。我们强调,一些间接影响已经被记录下来(例如,当狩猎季节开始时,熊的栖息地利用和日常活动模式会发生变化,雄性社会结构的变化会导致性选择杀婴和减少人口增长)。在野生熊种群中,其他影响可能更难记录和量化(例如,雄性较年轻的年龄结构如何导致后代存活率下降)。我们建议熊和其他大型食肉动物种群的管理者采取预防措施,并假设间接影响确实存在,对种群结构有潜在影响,并且最终可能对种群增长产生不同于仅基于直接影响的收获模型预测的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Ursus
Ursus 生物-动物学
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
15.40%
发文量
12
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Ursus includes a variety of articles on all aspects of bear management and research worldwide. Original manuscripts are welcome. In addition to manuscripts reporting original research, submissions may be based on thoughtful review and synthesis of previously-reported information, innovative philosophies and opinions, and public policy or legal aspects of wildlife conservation. Notes of general interest are also welcome. Invited manuscripts will be clearly identified, but will still be subject to peer review. All manuscripts must be in English. All manuscripts are peer-reviewed, and subject to rigorous editorial standards.
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