Human-mediated shifts in animal habitat use : Sequential changes in pronghorn use of a natural gas field in Greater Yellowstone
(Book)

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Published
[Barking, Essex England] : [Elsevier ], 2012.
Physical Description
pages 222-233 : maps, charts ; 28 cm.
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Yellowstone Research Library - Pamphlet or Vertical File CollectionMAMM-ARTIO-ANTILO(BECKMANN)On Shelf

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Published
[Barking, Essex England] : [Elsevier ], 2012.
Format
Book
Language
English

Notes

General Note
Printout of article.
Bibliography
Includes references.
Summary
To manage America's 991,479 km2 (245 million acres) of public BLM lands for such mixed uses as natural resource extraction, wildlife, and recreation requires knowledge about effects of habitat alterations. Two of North America?s largest natural gas fields occur in the southern region of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (Wyoming), an area that contains >100,000 wintering ungulates. During a 5-year period (2005?2009), we concentrated on patterns of habitat selection of pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) to understand how winter weather and increasing habitat loss due to gas field development impact habitat selection. Since this population is held below a food ceiling (i.e., carrying capacity) by human harvest, we expected few habitat constraints on animal movements ? hence we examined fine-scale habitat use in relationship to progressive energy footprints. We used mixed-effects resource selection function models on 125 GPS-collared female pronghorn, and analyzed a comprehensive set of factors that included habitat (e.g., slope, plant cover type) and variables examining the impact of gas field infrastructure and human activity (e.g., distance to nearest road and well pad, amount of habitat loss due to conversion to a road or well pad) inside gas fields. Our RSF models demonstrate: (1) a fivefold sequential decrease in habitat patches predicted to be of high use and (2) sequential fine-scale abandonment by pronghorn of areas with the greatest habitat loss and greatest industrial footprint. The ability to detect behavioral impacts may be a better sentinel and earlier warning for burgeoning impacts of resource extraction on wildlife populations than studies focused solely on demography. Nevertheless disentangling cause and effect through the use of behavior warrants further investigation.

Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Beckmann, J. P., Murray, K., Seidler, R. G., & Berger, J. (2012). Human-mediated shifts in animal habitat use: Sequential changes in pronghorn use of a natural gas field in Greater Yellowstone . [Elsevier ].

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Jon P. Beckmann et al.. 2012. Human-mediated Shifts in Animal Habitat Use: Sequential Changes in Pronghorn Use of a Natural Gas Field in Greater Yellowstone. [Elsevier ].

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Jon P. Beckmann et al.. Human-mediated Shifts in Animal Habitat Use: Sequential Changes in Pronghorn Use of a Natural Gas Field in Greater Yellowstone [Elsevier ], 2012.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Beckmann, Jon P., Kim Murray, Renee G Seidler, and Joel Berger. Human-mediated Shifts in Animal Habitat Use: Sequential Changes in Pronghorn Use of a Natural Gas Field in Greater Yellowstone [Elsevier ], 2012.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.