Invasion in cold: weather effects on winter activity of an alien mesopredator at its northern range

IF 1.8 3区 生物学 Q3 ECOLOGY European Journal of Wildlife Research Pub Date : 2024-07-08 DOI:10.1007/s10344-024-01824-0
Vesa Selonen, Pyry Toivonen, Elina Tuomikoski
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Abstract

Whether an invasive species thrives in cold ecosystems depends on its response to winter weather. A potential threat to these ecosystems in Europe is the invasive raccoon dog (Nyctereutes procyonoides). The survival of this mesopredator is supported in cold weather, because it can periodically use winter sleep, but its winter activity levels compared to native mesopredators remain unclear. We investigated the winter behaviour of raccoon dogs in Finland, near the edge of their invasion front, and compared their activity to native red foxes and badgers. Using wildlife cameras, we found that raccoon dogs do reduce activity during the coldest months, but camera observations did not strongly correlate with temperature perhaps due to feeding at camera sites. That is, artificial food sources may have increased raccoon dogs’ winter activity. Nevertheless, they responded more clearly to temperature drops than red foxes, but were more active than badgers that were mostly dormant and thus absent from our data. GPS-tracked raccoon dogs remained at some level active through winter, even near subarctic regions, but the cold and snowy weather clearly decreased activity and individuals stayed close to their nests during the coldest periods. Overall, these findings suggest that raccoon dogs can maintain some winter activity even in extremely cold environments, and they readily exploit human-provided resources. This potential ability to thrive in cold regions highlights the invasive potential of raccoon dogs. As winters become milder due to climate change, their numbers could increase significantly within cold-adapted ecosystems, impacting native species and posing conservation challenges.

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寒冷中的入侵:天气对外来中型食肉动物在其北方分布区冬季活动的影响
入侵物种能否在寒冷的生态系统中茁壮成长取决于其对冬季天气的反应。入侵的浣熊犬(Nyctereutes procyonoides)是欧洲这些生态系统的一个潜在威胁。这种中型食肉动物在寒冷的天气中也能生存,因为它可以周期性地利用冬季睡眠,但与本地中型食肉动物相比,它的冬季活动水平仍不清楚。我们调查了浣熊犬在芬兰靠近其入侵前沿的冬季行为,并将其活动与本地红狐和獾进行了比较。通过使用野生动物摄像机,我们发现浣熊犬在最寒冷的月份确实减少了活动,但摄像机观察到的情况与气温并没有很强的相关性,这可能是由于在摄像机拍摄地点进食的缘故。也就是说,人工食物来源可能会增加浣熊犬的冬季活动。尽管如此,它们对气温下降的反应比赤狐更明显,但比獾更活跃,因为獾大多处于休眠状态,所以我们的数据中没有它们的活动。GPS追踪的浣熊犬在整个冬季都保持着一定程度的活动,甚至在亚北极地区也是如此,但寒冷和多雪的天气明显减少了它们的活动,而且在最寒冷的时期,浣熊犬个体会呆在它们的巢穴附近。总之,这些研究结果表明,浣熊犬即使在极其寒冷的环境中也能保持一定的冬季活动,而且它们很容易利用人类提供的资源。这种在寒冷地区繁衍生息的潜在能力凸显了浣熊犬的入侵潜力。随着气候变化导致冬季变得温和,浣熊犬的数量可能会在适应寒冷的生态系统中大幅增加,从而影响本地物种,给保护工作带来挑战。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
5.00%
发文量
68
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: European Journal of Wildlife Research focuses on all aspects of wildlife biology. Main areas are: applied wildlife ecology; diseases affecting wildlife population dynamics, conservation, economy or public health; ecotoxicology; management for conservation, hunting or pest control; population genetics; and the sustainable use of wildlife as a natural resource. Contributions to socio-cultural aspects of human-wildlife relationships and to the history and sociology of hunting will also be considered.
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