Studying how animals interact with their environment is fundamental to informing conservation and management efforts, especially when examining large, wide-ranging carnivores in human-dominated landscapes. We hypothesized that the home ranges of bears are configured to exploit supplemental food (corn) and avoid people. In 2004–2016, we tracked 10 brown bears from the Dinaric-Pindos population using GPS telemetry, then used Brownian bridge movement models to estimate their home ranges. We related seasonal home range size to circadian period and density of supplemental feeding sites using generalized linear mixed-effect models. We also used ecological-niche factor analysis to study habitat composition within home range core areas in study areas characterized by different levels of human encroachment. We found that home range size was inversely related to density of supplemental feeding sites, and bears had larger home ranges at night (x̅ = 103.3 ± 72.8 km2) than during the day (x̅ = 62.3 ± 16.6 km2). Our results also revealed that bears living in more human-influenced areas concentrated their use far from human settlements and agricultural lands but stayed close to supplemental feeding sites. Our data suggest that bears alter their space-use patterns at the home range level in response to anthropogenic land use and food availability.

Factors affecting the home range of Dinaric-Pindos brown bears / De Angelis, Daniele; Huber, Djuro; Reljic, Slaven; Ciucci, Paolo; Kusak, Josip. - In: JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY. - ISSN 0022-2372. - (2021). [10.1093/jmammal/gyab018]

Factors affecting the home range of Dinaric-Pindos brown bears

De Angelis, Daniele
;
Ciucci, Paolo;
2021

Abstract

Studying how animals interact with their environment is fundamental to informing conservation and management efforts, especially when examining large, wide-ranging carnivores in human-dominated landscapes. We hypothesized that the home ranges of bears are configured to exploit supplemental food (corn) and avoid people. In 2004–2016, we tracked 10 brown bears from the Dinaric-Pindos population using GPS telemetry, then used Brownian bridge movement models to estimate their home ranges. We related seasonal home range size to circadian period and density of supplemental feeding sites using generalized linear mixed-effect models. We also used ecological-niche factor analysis to study habitat composition within home range core areas in study areas characterized by different levels of human encroachment. We found that home range size was inversely related to density of supplemental feeding sites, and bears had larger home ranges at night (x̅ = 103.3 ± 72.8 km2) than during the day (x̅ = 62.3 ± 16.6 km2). Our results also revealed that bears living in more human-influenced areas concentrated their use far from human settlements and agricultural lands but stayed close to supplemental feeding sites. Our data suggest that bears alter their space-use patterns at the home range level in response to anthropogenic land use and food availability.
2021
anthropogenic effects, brown bear, Brownian bridge movement model, core areas, GPS telemetry, home range, spaceuse patterns, supplemental feeding, Ursus arctos
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Factors affecting the home range of Dinaric-Pindos brown bears / De Angelis, Daniele; Huber, Djuro; Reljic, Slaven; Ciucci, Paolo; Kusak, Josip. - In: JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY. - ISSN 0022-2372. - (2021). [10.1093/jmammal/gyab018]
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Note: https://academic.oup.com/jmammal/advance-article-abstract/doi/10.1093/jmammal/gyab018/6180561
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1527843
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