Anthropogenic and Environmental Factors Determining Local Favourable Conditions for Wolves during the Cold Season
Autor: | Carlo Maria Rossi, Riccardo Primi, Cinzia Franceschini, Paolo Viola, Andrea Amici, Marco Apollonio, Settimio Adriani |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
Veterinary medicine Wildlife Distribution (economics) LASSO regression 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences Article resource availability thermal refuges Odds Predation human disturbance anthropogenic opportunities heat load index Wild boar Lasso regression biology.animal SF600-1100 wolf–free-ranging-dogs interaction General Veterinary biology Cold season business.industry 010604 marine biology & hydrobiology wolf howling audibility analysis Geography QL1-991 Animal Science and Zoology Species richness business Zoology Demography |
Zdroj: | Animals Volume 11 Issue 7 Animals, Vol 11, Iss 1895, p 1895 (2021) Animals : an Open Access Journal from MDPI |
ISSN: | 2076-2615 |
DOI: | 10.3390/ani11071895 |
Popis: | Simple Summary Wolves normally howl in response to unfamiliar vocalisations, to defend their territory and the important resources within it (e.g., pups and prey). During the non-rendezvous period (late autumn and winter), the protectiveness of adults towards pups decreases, as well as reactions to unfamiliar vocal stimuli. In the late fall of 2010, we performed a saturation wolf howling design in the Cicolano area (Central Apennines, Italy), aiming to identify environmental and human-related characteristics of locations where wolves are prone to respond to unfamiliar howling and to assess their eventual ability to provide insights into the distribution of valuable resources (aside from pups) during the cold season. We found that winter response sites (WRS) were characterized by diverging conditions, with respect to all available sites, suggesting that they are non-randomly located but, instead, had been selected by wolves for some reason. We recorded a positive role of thermal refuges and the occurrence of wild boar drive hunts, as well as the negative roles of other forms of human presence and activities, including the occurrence of free-ranging dogs. These results could be of interest both for conservation purposes and for assessing interactions with human activities. Abstract Winter resources are crucial for wildlife, and, at a local scale, some anthropogenic and environmental factors could affect their availability. In the case of wolves, it is known that vocalisations in response to unfamiliar howls are issued to defend their territory and the important resources within it. Then, we studied the characteristics of winter response sites (WRS) during the cold season, aiming to assess their eventual ability to provide insights into the distribution of valuable resources within their territories. Within this scope, we planned a wolf-howling survey following a standardised approach. The study covered an Apennine (Central Italy) area of 500 km2. A hexagonal mesh was imposed on the area, in order to determine the values of different variables at the local scale. A logistic LASSO regression was performed. WRS were positively related to the presence of thermal refuges (odds = 114.485), to patch richness (odds = 1.153), wild boar drive hunting areas (odds = 1.015), and time elapsed since the last hunt (odds = 1.019). Among negative factors, stray dogs reply considerably affects wolves’ responsiveness (odds = 0.207), where odds are the exponentiated coefficients estimated by the logistic lasso regression. These results suggest that WRS are related to anthropogenic and environmental factors favouring the predation process. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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