Relocation of habituated black bears in the Klamath Mountains of California: an adaptive management case study

IF 1 4区 生物学 Q3 FISHERIES California Fish and Wildlife Journal Pub Date : 2021-11-02 DOI:10.51492/cfwj.hwisi.5
R. Schaefer, Dennis Moyles, S. McDonald, Monty Cervelli, D. Beck
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Abstract

Black bear (Ursus americanus) populations in California have increased in abundance and distribution despite rising trends in the urban encroachment of wildlands. As human-black bear conflicts increase, opportunities to study the relocation of black bears in an adaptive management setting are important for improving the management of this highprofile species. Habituated black bears, some tamed and made tractable through human-controlled food conditioning, were relocated to a remote region of the Klamath Mountains to analyze home range use, survival, return rates, and mortality. Relocated black bears with known outcomes demonstrated an 80% return rate, with 55% not surviving beyond five months. Female bears established home ranges significantly larger than males, and may suggest an enhanced maternal instinct in search of similar nutritional conditions prior to relocation. This study showed that the relocation of food-conditioned black bears resulted in high return rates, poor survival, and risk to public safety.
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加州克拉马斯山黑熊迁居:适应性管理案例研究
尽管城市对荒地的侵占呈上升趋势,但加州黑熊(美洲熊)的数量和分布都有所增加。随着人类与黑熊冲突的增加,在适应性管理环境中研究黑熊的重新安置对于改善这一引人注目的物种的管理非常重要。习惯的黑熊,其中一些通过人类控制的食物调节而被驯服和驯服,被重新安置到克拉马斯山脉的一个偏远地区,以分析家庭范围的使用,存活率,返回率和死亡率。已知结果的重新安置黑熊的回归率为80%,其中55%的黑熊活不过5个月。母熊建立的家园范围比公熊大得多,这可能表明在迁移之前,母性本能在寻找相似的营养条件。这项研究表明,重新安置食物条件下的黑熊会导致高回归率、低存活率和公共安全风险。
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