2022
DOI: 10.1002/eap.2722
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Integration of aerial surveys and resource selection analysis indicates human land use supports boreal deer expansion

Abstract: Landscape change is a driver of global biodiversity loss. In the western Nearctic, petroleum exploration and extraction is a major contributor to landscape change, with concomitant effects on large mammal populations. One of those effects is the continued expansion of invasive white‐tailed deer populations into the boreal forest, with ramifications for the whole ecosystem. We explored deer resource selection within the oil sands region of the boreal forest using a novel application of aerial ungulate survey (A… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The combined effects of climate change and human disturbance have facilitated the northward range expansion of white‐tailed deer into boreal forest ecosystems (Dawe & Boutin, 2016; Frelich et al, 2012; Fuller et al, 2023). At the same time, moose abundance and distribution have retracted at their southern edge, while wolf populations have steadily recovered and extended their range southward in Minnesota (Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, 2022) and elsewhere along the temperate forest–boreal forest ecotone (Bowman et al, 2010; Frelich et al, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The combined effects of climate change and human disturbance have facilitated the northward range expansion of white‐tailed deer into boreal forest ecosystems (Dawe & Boutin, 2016; Frelich et al, 2012; Fuller et al, 2023). At the same time, moose abundance and distribution have retracted at their southern edge, while wolf populations have steadily recovered and extended their range southward in Minnesota (Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, 2022) and elsewhere along the temperate forest–boreal forest ecotone (Bowman et al, 2010; Frelich et al, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the range of overlap between white‐tailed deer and wolves expands, understanding wolf predation on deer will become increasingly important. This is particularly true for areas where deer expansion may alter boreal food webs through negative indirect effects on ungulates such as moose and caribou (Fuller et al, 2023), including intensifying predation on other ungulates through apparent competition (Latham et al, 2013; Latham, Latham, McCutchen, & Boutin, 2011). If anthropogenic linear features increase the efficiency with which wolves hunt deer, as our results suggest, the indirect effects of deer expansion on other ungulates will be exacerbated by human activity via mechanisms such as apparent competition.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Generally, this productivity gradient occurs along a northwest–southeast axis. Though agriculture is rare in the Boreal Plains and Boreal Shield, land clearing for oil and gas exploration and forest harvest are hypothesized to increase forage availability beyond the baseline variation in productivity (Serrouya et al., 2021), potentially supporting higher densities of deer (Fuller et al., 2022). However, concomitant with changes in habitat alteration, climate change has resulted in less severe winters that increase white‐tailed deer survival, and longer growing seasons that increases food availability (Beier & McCullough, 1990; Dawe & Boutin, 2016; Kennedy‐Slaney et al., 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Generally, this productivity gradient occurs along a northwest-southeast axis. Though agriculture is rare in the Boreal Plains and Boreal Shield, land clearing for oil and gas exploration and forest harvest are hypothesized to increase forage availability beyond the baseline variation in productivity (Serrouya et al, 2021), potentially supporting higher densities of deer (Fuller et al, 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%