2010
DOI: 10.1139/z09-136
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The bioclimatic envelope of the wolverine (Gulo gulo): do climatic constraints limit its geographic distribution?

Abstract: We propose a fundamental geographic distribution for the wolverine ( Gulo gulo (L., 1758)) based on the hypothesis that the occurrence of wolverines is constrained by their obligate association with persistent spring snow cover for successful reproductive denning and by an upper limit of thermoneutrality. To investigate this hypothesis, we developed a composite of MODIS classified satellite images representing persistent snow cover from 24 April to 15 May, which encompasses the end of the wolverine’s reproduct… Show more

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Cited by 111 publications
(210 citation statements)
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“…It will also be important to consider what cached food is being used for during periods of low resource availability. For example, both Gray Jays and Wolverines use cached food not just for survival but also for reproduction [28,154], meaning that multiple demographic vital rates may be linked to changes in cached food quality over time. Identifying the vital rates driving population dynamics will help to identify how the downstream effects of climate change on cached food quality may influence population growth rates.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It will also be important to consider what cached food is being used for during periods of low resource availability. For example, both Gray Jays and Wolverines use cached food not just for survival but also for reproduction [28,154], meaning that multiple demographic vital rates may be linked to changes in cached food quality over time. Identifying the vital rates driving population dynamics will help to identify how the downstream effects of climate change on cached food quality may influence population growth rates.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The wolverine is a solitary carnivore with a polygamous mating system (Hedmark et al 2007), intrasexual territoriality Inman et al 2012a) and male-biased natal dispersal (Vangen et al 2001;Flagstad et al 2004). Wolverines occupy arctic tundra and boreal forest zones of Eurasia and North America (Copeland et al 2010) and are adapted to harsh environmental conditions with low productivity by being an opportunistic generalist predator and scavenger that caches food for later use (Inman et al 2012b;Mattisson et al 2016). Wolverine female reproductive success is influenced by winter food availability as well as age-related reproductive costs, where the probability to successfully reproduce 2 years in a row declines with age (Persson 2005;Rauset et al 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This facultative scavenger occupies a cold, low-productivity niche (Copeland et al, 2010;Inman et al, 2012a,b) that results in sparse population densities ($5/1000 km 2 ) and low reproductive rates (0.7 young/female > 3 yrs/yr) across its range (Golden et al, 2007;Inman et al, 2012a;Persson et al, 2006). As a result, wolverine populations are relatively vulnerable due to their small size and limited capacity for growth (Brøseth et al, 2010;Persson et al, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%