ELK ALTER HABITAT SELECTION AS AN ANTIPREDATOR RESPONSE TO WOLVES
Montana State University · Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks · +1 more institution
Abstract
For elk (Cervus elaphus) in the Gallatin drainage of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, Montana, USA, wolf movements caused local predation risk to vary substantially on a time scale of days. Spatially and temporally fine-scaled data from GPS radio collars show that elk moved into the protective cover of wooded areas when wolves were present, reducing their use of preferred grassland foraging habitats that had high predation risk. By constraining habitat selection, wolves may have greater effects on elk dynamics than would be predicted on the basis of direct predation alone. Based on changes in the woody vegetation following the reintroduction of wolves, it has been suggested that antipredator responses by elk…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 25.47
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 56
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Predation
- Trophic cascade
- Ecology
- Foraging
- Habitat
- Trophic level
- Vegetation (pathology)
- Ecosystem
- Life in Land