Litcius/Paper detail

Protection status, human disturbance, snow cover and trapping drive density of a declining wolverine population in the Canadian Rocky Mountains

Mirjam Barrueto, Anne Forshner, Jesse Whittington, Anthony P. Clevenger, Marco Musiani

2022Scientific Reports31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Protected areas are important in species conservation, but high rates of human-caused mortality outside their borders and increasing popularity for recreation can negatively affect wildlife populations. We quantified wolverine ( Gulo gulo ) population trends from 2011 to 2020 in > 14,000 km 2 protected and non-protected habitat in southwestern Canada. We conducted wolverine and multi-species surveys using non-invasive DNA and remote camera-based methods. We developed Bayesian integrated models combining spatial capture-recapture data of marked and unmarked individuals with occupancy data. Wolverine density and occupancy declined by 39%, with an annual population growth rate of 0.925. Density within protected areas was 3 times higher than outside and declined between 2011 (3.6 wolverines/1000 km 2 ) and 2020 (2.1 wolverines/1000 km 2 ). Wolverine density and detection probability increased with snow cover and decreased near development. Detection probability also decreased with human recreational activity. The annual harvest rate of ≥ 13% was above the maximum sustainable rate. We conclude that humans negatively affected the population through direct mortality, sub-lethal effects and habitat impacts. Our study exemplifies the need to monitor population trends for species at risk—within and between protected areas—as steep declines can occur unnoticed if key conservation concerns are not identified and addressed.

Topics & Concepts

OccupancyWildlifeGeographyHabitatPopulationEcologyPopulation densityRecreationDisturbance (geology)Wildlife conservationSnow coverLand coverPopulation sizeVital ratesSnowPopulation growthPhysical geographyLand useBiologyDemographySociologyPaleontologyMeteorologyWildlife Ecology and ConservationSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeEnvironmental DNA in Biodiversity Studies