Bear diets and human-bear conflicts: insights from isotopic ecology

被引:2
作者
Falconi, Nereyda [1 ,2 ]
Carlo, Tomas A. [3 ]
Fuller, Todd K. [1 ]
Destefano, Stephen [2 ]
Organ, John F. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Environm Conservat, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
[2] Univ Massachusetts, Massachusetts Cooperat Fish & Wildlife Res Unit U, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
[3] Penn State Univ, Dept Biol, State Coll, PA 16801 USA
[4] US Geol Survey, Cooperat Res Units Program, Reston, VA 20192 USA
关键词
bears; carnivory; Nitrogen-15; omnivory; stable isotopes; trophic position; Ursidae; AMERICAN BLACK BEARS; GRIZZLY BEARS; URSUS-ARCTOS; HABITS; NICHE;
D O I
10.1111/mam.12285
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Bears, Ursidae, are considered omnivores, except for giant pandas Ailuropoda melanoleuca and polar bears Ursus maritimus. However, omnivory includes a wide range of dietary variation and trophic positions, making bear dietary ecology unclear. We inferred bear trophic positions from delta N-15 (parts per thousand) values and examined their correlation with diets reported in the literature, including frequency of human-bear conflicts (livestock predation and crop damage incidents). Overall, N-15 signatures were consistent with diet estimates. Bear species with higher N-15 signatures differed more from each other, including cases of large regional intraspecific variance, than bear species with lower N-15 signatures. Bear trophic position and frequency of reports of human-bear conflicts were uncorrelated, suggesting that livestock predation by bears is an opportunistic behaviour rather than a response to food availability dynamics.
引用
收藏
页码:322 / 327
页数:6
相关论文
共 19 条
[11]   Diet Evolution and Habitat Contraction of Giant Pandas via Stable Isotope Analysis [J].
Han, Han ;
Wei, Wei ;
Hu, Yibo ;
Nie, Yonggang ;
Ji, Xueping ;
Yan, Li ;
Zhang, Zejun ;
Shi, Xiaoxue ;
Zhu, Lifeng ;
Luo, Yunbing ;
Chen, Weicai ;
Wei, Fuwen .
CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2019, 29 (04) :664-+
[12]   Stable isotopes to detect food-conditioned bears and to evaluate human-bear management [J].
Hopkins, John B., III ;
Koch, Paul L. ;
Schwartz, Charles C. ;
Ferguson, Jake M. ;
Greenleaf, Schuyler S. ;
Kalinowski, Steven T. .
JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT, 2012, 76 (04) :703-713
[13]   Dietary plasticity and the importance of salmon to brown bear (Ursus arctos) body size and condition in a low Arctic ecosystem [J].
Mangipane, Lindsey S. ;
Lafferty, Diana J. R. ;
Joly, Kyle ;
Sorum, Mathew S. ;
Cameron, Matthew D. ;
Belant, Jerrold L. ;
Hilderbrand, Grant, V ;
Gustine, David D. .
POLAR BIOLOGY, 2020, 43 (07) :825-833
[14]   Dietary niche partitioning among black bears, grizzly bears, and wolves in a multiprey ecosystem [J].
Merkle, Jerod A. ;
Polfus, Jean L. ;
Derbridge, Jonathan J. ;
Heinemeyer, Kimberly S. .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY, 2017, 95 (09) :663-671
[15]   A niche for isotopic ecology [J].
Newsome, Seth D. ;
del Rio, Carlos Martinez ;
Bearhop, Stuart ;
Phillips, Donald L. .
FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2007, 5 (08) :429-436
[16]   The Diet of the Brown Bear (Ursus arctos) in the Central Forest Nature Reserve (West-European Russia), Based on Scat Analysis Data [J].
Ogurtsov, S. S. .
BIOLOGY BULLETIN, 2018, 45 (09) :1039-1054
[17]   Brown bear feeding habits in a poor mast year where supplemental feeding occurs [J].
Pereira, Joana ;
Vilicic, Leona ;
Rosalino, Luis Miguel ;
Reljic, Slaven ;
Habazin, Marina ;
Huber, Duro .
URSUS, 2021, 32 (E1) :1-13
[18]   Autumn food habits of the brown bear Ursus arctos in the Golestan National Park: a pilot study in Iran [J].
Soofi, Mahmood ;
Qashqaei, Ali Turk ;
Aryal, Achyut ;
Coogan, Sean C. P. .
MAMMALIA, 2018, 82 (04) :338-342
[19]   Assimilated diet patterns of American black bears in the Sierra Nevada and western Great Basin, Nevada, USA [J].
van Manen, Jennapher Teunissen ;
Lackey, Carl W. ;
Beckmann, Jon P. ;
Muller, Lisa, I ;
Li, Zheng-Hua .
URSUS, 2019, 30 (E3) :40-50