Determining Spatial Responses of Fishers (Pekania Pennanti) to Mechanical Treatments of Forest Stands for Fuel Reduction.

IF 2.7 2区 农林科学 Q1 AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE Animals Pub Date : 2025-02-04 DOI:10.3390/ani15030434
Tessa R Smith, Eric M Gese, R David Clayton, Patricia A Terletzky, Kathryn L Purcell, Craig M Thompson
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Abstract

Historical forestry practices (e.g., fire suppression, heavy timber logging) have contributed to a discernable change in stand composition of western forests in the U.S., which now comprise a tinderbox mixture of increased surface and ladder fuels, dense stands, and fire-intolerant species. Forest managers are mitigating this concern by implementing silviculture practices (e.g., selective logging, thinning, prescribed burning) to reduce fuel loads and improve stand resiliency. Concern for habitat specialists, such as the fisher (Pekania pennanti), have arisen as they may be negatively influenced in the short-term by modifications to their environment that are needed to ensure long-term habitat persistence. To address this issue, we initiated an 8-year study in 2010 in Ashland, Oregon, to determine the behavioral response of fishers to fuel reduction treatments applied in forested stands. We measured the distance of each location from eight GPS-collared fishers to all treatments before and after they were treated within each home range, and performed three statistical tests for robustness, including a multi-response permutation procedure, chi-squared test of independence, and a Kolmogorov-Smirnov assessment. We found high variation among individuals to the tolerance of habitat manipulation. Using effect size to interpret the magnitude of fisher response to pre- and post-treatment effects, 1 fisher showed a moderate negative relationship to fuel reduction treatments, 5 exhibited a weak negative response, and 2 had a weak positive association with treatments. We used analysis of variance on the three fishers exhibiting the largest effect sizes to treatment disturbance, and used treatment, temporal, and habitat covariates to explore whether these factors influenced behavioral differences. Treatment season and vegetation class were important factors influencing response distance in the pre-treatment period. Post-treatment variables eliciting a negative treatment response were treatment season and treatment size, and results were slightly different when parsing out individual effects compared to a pooled sample set. Our findings suggested that seasonal timing and the location of management activities could influence fisher movement throughout their home range, but it was largely context-dependent based on the perceived risks or benefits to individuals.

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确定渔民(Pekania Pennanti)对林分减量机械处理的空间响应。
历史上的林业实践(例如,灭火、大量伐木)导致了美国西部森林林分组成的明显变化,现在包括增加的地表和阶梯燃料、密集的林分和不耐火物种的火药桶混合物。森林管理者正在通过实施造林措施(例如,选择性采伐、间伐、规定焚烧)来减轻这种担忧,以减少燃料负荷并提高林分的恢复能力。人们对生境专家,如渔人(Pekania pennanti)感到关切,因为它们为确保生境长期存在而需要改变其环境,短期内可能会受到不利影响。为了解决这个问题,我们于2010年在俄勒冈州的阿什兰发起了一项为期8年的研究,以确定渔民对森林林分中使用的燃料减少处理的行为反应。我们测量了8名戴gps项圈的渔民在每个家庭范围内接受治疗前后到所有治疗的每个位置的距离,并进行了三次统计检验,包括多响应排列程序、卡方独立性检验和Kolmogorov-Smirnov评估。我们发现个体对栖息地操纵的容忍度存在很大差异。使用效应量来解释fisher对治疗前和治疗后效应的反应程度,1 fisher对燃料减少处理表现出中度负相关,5 fisher表现出弱负相关,2 fisher与治疗有弱正相关。我们对三名渔民进行了方差分析,显示出对治疗干扰的最大影响,并使用治疗、时间和栖息地协变量来探讨这些因素是否影响行为差异。处理季节和植被类型是影响预处理期响应距离的重要因素。引起负面治疗反应的治疗后变量是治疗季节和治疗规模,在分析个体效应时,与合并样本集相比,结果略有不同。我们的研究结果表明,季节性时间和管理活动的地点可能会影响渔民在其家乡范围内的活动,但这在很大程度上取决于个体感知的风险或利益。
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来源期刊
Animals
Animals Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Animal Science and Zoology
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
16.70%
发文量
3015
审稿时长
20.52 days
期刊介绍: Animals (ISSN 2076-2615) is an international and interdisciplinary scholarly open access journal. It publishes original research articles, reviews, communications, and short notes that are relevant to any field of study that involves animals, including zoology, ethnozoology, animal science, animal ethics and animal welfare. However, preference will be given to those articles that provide an understanding of animals within a larger context (i.e., the animals'' interactions with the outside world, including humans). There is no restriction on the length of the papers. Our aim is to encourage scientists to publish their experimental and theoretical research in as much detail as possible. Full experimental details and/or method of study, must be provided for research articles. Articles submitted that involve subjecting animals to unnecessary pain or suffering will not be accepted, and all articles must be submitted with the necessary ethical approval (please refer to the Ethical Guidelines for more information).
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