The role of forage availability on diet choice and body condition in American beavers (Castor canadensis)

Mammalian Biology - Tập 78 - Trang 87-93 - 2013
William J. Severud1, Steve K. Windels2, Jerrold L. Belant3, John G. Bruggink1
1Department of Biology, Northern Michigan University, Marquette, USA
2National Park Service, Voyageurs National Park, International Falls, USA
3Carnivore Ecology Laboratory, Forest and Wildlife Research Center, Mississippi State University, USA

Tóm tắt

Forage availability can affect body condition and reproduction in wildlife. We used terrestrial and aquatic vegetation sampling, stable isotope analysis, and livetrapping to investigate the influence of estimated forage biomass on diet, body condition, and reproduction in American beavers (Castor canadensis) in the Namakan Reservoir, Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota, USA, May 2008–September 2009. Available terrestrial and emergent aquatic forage varied greatly among territories, but floating leaf aquatic forage was low in abundance in all territories. Variation in estimated biomass of available emergent and terrestrial vegetation did not explain variation in respective assimilated diets, but variation in floating leaf vegetation explained 31% of variation in assimilated floating leaf diets. No models using available vegetation explained variation in body condition. Body condition of individual females in spring did not affect kit catch per unit effort, and overwinter body condition of subadults and adults was similar between territories with and without kits. We found no evidence that available aquatic vegetation affected beaver body condition or fitness. Available forage may be above minimum thresholds to detect differences in diet choice or body condition. Other factors such as water level fluctuations or climatic variables may also explain variation in beaver body condition.

Tài liệu tham khảo

Aleksiuk, M., 1970. The function of the tail as a fat storage depot in the beaver (Castor canadensis). J. Mammal. 51, 145–148. Allen, A.W., 1983. Habitat suitability index models: beaver. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service FWS/OBS-82/10.30. Ayers, C.R., Belant, J.L., Millspaugh, J.J., 2012. Directness of resource use metrics affects predictions of bear body fat gain. Polar Biol., https://doi.org/dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00300-012-1247-7. Baker, B.W., 2003. Beaver (Castor canadensis) in heavily browsed environments. Lutra 46, 173–181. Baker, B.W., Ducharme, H.C., Mitchell, D.C.S., Stanley, T.R., Peinetti, H.R., 2005. Interaction of beaver and elk herbivory reduces standing crop of willow. Ecol. Appl. 15, 110–118. Baker, B.W., Hill, E.P., 2003. Beaver (Castor canadensis). In: Feldhamer, G.A., Thompson, B.C., Chapman, J.A. (Eds.), Wild Mammals of North America: Biology, Management, and Conservation. , 2nd edition. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, pp. 288–310. Barnes, D.M., Mallik, A.U., 1997. Habitat factors influencing beaver dam establishment in a northern Ontario watershed. J. Wildlife Manage. 61, 1371–1377. Beauvais, G.P., Buskirk, S.W., 1999. Modifying estimatesof sampling effort to account for sprung traps. Wildlife Soc. B 27, 39–43. Beier, P., Barrett, R.H., 1987. Beaver habitat use and impact in Truckee River Basin, California. J. Wildlife Manage. 51, 794–799. Belant, J.L., Kielland, K., Follmann, E.H., Adams, L.G., 2006. Interspecific resource partitioning in sympatric ursids. Ecol. Appl. 16, 2333–2343. Belovsky, G.E., 1984. Summer diet optimization by beaver. Am. Midl. Nat. 111, 209–222. Breck, S.W., Wilson, K.R., Anderson, D.C., 2001. The demographic response of bankdwelling beavers to flow regulation: a comparison on the Green and Yampa rivers. Can. J. Zool. 79, 1957–1964. Buech, R.R., Rugg, D.J., 1995. Biomass of food available to beavers on five Minnesota shrubs. Research Paper NC-326. US Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Forest Experiment Station, St. Paul, MN. Busher, P.E., 1995. Food caching behavior of beavers (Castor canadensis): selection and use of woody species. Am. Midl. Nat. 135, 343–348. Buskirk, S.W., Millspaugh, J.J., 2006. Metrics for studies of resource selection. J. Wildlife Manage. 70, 358–366. Cloern, J.E., Canuel, E.A., Harris, D., 2002. Stable carbon and isotope composition of aquatic and terrestrial plants of the San Francisco Bay estuarine system. Limnol. Oceanogr. 47, 713–729. Connolly, B.J., Grigal, D.F., 1983. Biomass estimations for wetland tall shrubs. Minnesota Forestry Research Notes 284. Cook, R.D., 1979. Influential observations in linear regression. J. Am. Stat. Assoc. 74, 169–174. Craig, H., 1957. Isotopic standards for carbon and oxygen and correction factors for mass-spectrometric analysis of carbon dioxide. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 12, 133–149. Dennington, M., Johnson, B., 1974. Studies of beaver habitat in the MacKenzie Delta and northern Yukon. Environmental-Social Committee, Northern Pipelines, Task Force on Northern Oil Development, Ottawa, Rep. 74–39. Doucet, C.M., Fryxell, J.M., 1993. The effect of nutritional quality on forage preference by beavers. Oikos 67, 201–208. Fraser, D., Chavez, E.R., Paloheimo, J.E., 1984. Aquatic feeding by moose: selection of plant species and feeding areas in relation to plant chemical composition and characteristics of lakes. Can. J. Zool. 62, 80–87. Fryxell, J.M., 2001. Habitat suitability and source-sink dynamics of beavers. J. Anim. Ecol. 70, 310–316. Gallant, D., Bérubé, C.H., Tremblay, E., Vasseur, L., 2004. An extensive study of the foraging ecology of beavers (Castor canadensis)in relation to habitat quality. Can. J. Zool. 82, 922–933. Gogan, P.J.P., Route, W.T., Olexa, E.M., Thomas, N., Kuehn, D., Podruzny, K.M., 2004. Gray wolves in and adjacent to Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota: Research and synthesis 1987–1991. Technical Report NPS/MWR/NRTR/2004-01. National Park Service, Omaha, Nebraska. Hiner, L.E., 1938. Observations on the foraging habits of beavers. J. Mammal. 19, 317–319. Hop, K., Faber-Langendoen, D., Lew-Smith, M., Aaseng, N., Lubinski, S., 2001. Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota: USGS-NPS Vegetation Mapping Program. US Department of the Interior, US Geological Survey, Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center, La Crosse, WI, US. Howard, R.J., Larson, J.S., 1985. A stream habitat classification system for beaver. J. Wildlife Manage. 49, 19–25. Huey, W.S., 1956. New Mexico beaver management. New Mexico Department of Game and Fish, Bulletin 4. Jenkins, S.H., 1979. Seasonal and year-to-year differences in food selection by beavers. Oecologia 44, 112–116. Jenkins, S.H., 1980. Problems, progress, and prospects in studies of food selection by beaver. In: Chapman, J.A., Pursley, D. (Eds.), Proceedings of the Worldwide Furbearer Conference. Frostburg, MD, pp. 559–579. Kallemeyn, L.W., Holmberg, K.L., Perry, J.A., Odde, B.Y., 2003. Aquatic synthesis for Voyageurs National Park. US Geological Survey, Information and Technology Report 2003-0001. Keeley, J.E., 1998. CAM photosynthesis in submerged aquatic plants. Bot. Rev. 64, 121–175. Kelly, J.F., 2000. Stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen in the study of avian and mammalian ecology. Can. J. Zool. 78, 1–27. Kielland, K., 2001. Stable isotope signatures of moose in relation to seasonal forage composition: a hypothesis. Alces 37, 329–337. Kurmis, V., Webb, S.L., Merriam Jr., L.C., 1986. Plant communities of Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota, U. S. A. Can. J. Bot. 64, 531–540. Lancia, R.A., Dodge, W.E., Larson, J.S., 1982. Winter activity patterns of two radiomarked beaver colonies. J. Mammal. 63, 598–606. Larson, J.S., van Nostrand, F.C., 1968. An evaluation of beaver aging techniques. J. Wildlife Manage. 32, 99–103. LaZerte, B.D., Szalados, J.E., 1982. Stable carbon isotope ratio of submerged freshwater macrophytes. Limnol. Oceanogr. 27, 413–418. Longley, W.H., Moyle, J.B., 1963. The beaver in Minnesota.Minnesota Department of Conservation, Technical Bulletin 6. MacNally, R., 2000. Regression and model-building in conservation biology, biogeography and ecology: the distinction between – and reconciliation of – ‘predictive’ and ‘explanatory’ models. Biodivers. Conserv. 9, 655–671. Mariotti, A., 1984. Atmospheric nitrogen is a reliable standard for natural 15N abundance measurements. Nature 303, 685–687. McNamara, J.M., Houston, A.I., 1992. Risk-sensitive foraging: a review of the theory. Bull. Math. Biol. 54, 355–378. Milligan, H.E., Humphries, M.M., 2010. The importance of aquatic vegetation in beaver diets and the seasonal and habitat specificity of aquatic-terrestrial ecosystem linkages in a subarctic environment. Oikos 119, 1877–1886. Milligan, H.E., Pretzlaw, T.D., Humphries, M.M., 2010. Stable isotope differentiation of freshwater and terrestrial plants in two subarctic regions. Ecoscience 17, 265–275. Mizukami, R.N., Goto, M., Izumiyama, S., Hayashi, H., Yoh, M., 2005. Estimation of feeding history by measuring carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratios in hair of Asiatic black bears. Ursus 16, 93–101. Northcott, T.H., 1972. Water lilies as beaver food. Oikos 23, 408–409. Novakowski, N.S., 1967. The winter bioenergetics of a beaver population in northern latitudes. Can. J. Zool. 45, 1107–1118. Noyce, K.V., Garshelis, D.L., 1994. Body size and blood characteristics as indicators of condition and reproductive performance in black bears. Int. Conf. Bear Res. Manage. 9, 481–496. Osborn, D.J., 1955. Techniques of sexing beaver, Castor canadensis. J. Mammal. 36, 141–142. Parker, J.D., Caudill, C.C., Hay, M.E., 2007. Beaver herbivory on aquatic plants. Oecologia 151, 616–625. Peig, J., Green, A.J., 2009. New perspectives for estimating body condition from mass/length data: the scaled mass index as an alternative method. Oikos 118, 1883–1891. Phillips, D.L., 2012. Converting isotope values to diet composition: the use of mixing models. J. Mammal. 93, 342–352. Phillips, D.L., Newsome, S.D., Gregg, J.W., 2005. Combining sources in stable isotope mixing models: alternative methods. Oecologia 144, 520–527. Raffel, T.R., Smith, N., Cortright, C., Gatz, A.J., 2009. Central place foraging by beavers (Castor canadensis) in a complex lake habitat. Am. Midl. Nat. 162, 62–73. Ray, A.M., Rebertus, A.J., Ray, H.L., 2001. Macrophyte succession in Minnesota beaver ponds. Can. J. Bot. 79, 487–499. Rogowitz, G.L., 1996. Trade-offs in energy allocation during lactation. Am. Zool. 36, 197–204. Rutherford, W.H., 1964. The beaver in Colorado: its biology, ecology, management, and economics. Colorado Game, Fish, and Parks Department. Technical Publication 17. Severud, W.J., 2011. American beaver (Castor canadensis) foraging ecology: predation avoidance, diet, and forage availability. Thesis. Northern Michigan University, Marquette, USA. Severud, W.J., Belant, J.L., Windels, S.K., Bruggink, J.G., 2013. Seasonal variation in assimilated diets of American beavers. Am. Midl. Nat. 169, 30–42. Shelton, P.C., 1966. Ecological studies of beavers, wolves, and moose in Isle Royale National Park, Michigan. Dissertation. Purdue University, Lafayette, USA. Sikes, R.S., Gannon, W.L., The Animal Care and Use Committee of the American Society of Mammalogists, 2011. Guidelines of the American Society of Mammalogists for the use of wild mammals in research. J. Mammal. 92, 235–253. Smith, D.W., 1997. Dispersal strategies and cooperative breeding in beavers. Dissertation. University of Nevada, Reno, USA. Smith, D.W., Jenkins, S.H., 1997. Seasonal change in body mass and size of tail of northern beavers. J. Mammal. 78, 869–876. Smith, D.W., Peterson, R.O., 1988. The effects of regulated lake levels on beaver in Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Research/Resources Management Report MWR-11. Midwest Regional Office, Omaha, Nebraska 68102, 84 pp. Smith, D.W., Peterson, R.O., 1991. Behavior of beaver in lakes with varying water levels in northern Minnesota. Environ. Manage. 15, 395–401. Smith, D.W., Peterson, R.O., Drummer, T.D., Sheputis, D.S., 1991. Over-winter activity and body temperature patterns in northern beavers. Can. J. Zool. 69, 2178–2182. Sponheimer, M., Robinson, T., Ayliffe, L., Passey, B., Roeder, B., Shipley, L., Lopez, E., Cerling, T., Dearing, D., Ehleringer, J., 2003a. An experimental study of carbonisotope fractionation between diet, hair, and feces of mammalian herbivores. Can. J. Zool. 81, 871–876. Sponheimer, M., Robinson, T., Ayliffe, L., Passey, B., Roeder, B., Shipley, L., Lopez, E., Cerling, T., Dearing, D., Ehleringer, J., 2003b. Nitrogen isotopes in mammalian herbivores: hair δ15N values from a controlled feeding study. Int. J. Osteoarcheol. 13, 80–87. Stewart, K.M., Bowyer, R.T., Kie, J.G., Dick, B.L., Ben-David, M., 2003. Niche partitioning among mule deer, elk, and cattle: do stable isotopes reflect dietary niche? Ecoscience 10, 297–302. Struck, U., Altenbach, A.V., Gaulke, M., Glaw, F., 2002. Tracing the diet of the monitor lizard Varanus mabitang by stable isotope analyses (δ15N, δ13C). Naturwissenschaften 89, 470–473. Ter-Mikaelian, M.T., Korzukhin, M.D., 1997. Biomass equations for sixty five North American tree species. Forest Ecol. Manage. 97, 1–24. Therrien, J.F., Côté, S.C., Festa-Bianchet, M., Ouellet, J.P., 2008. Maternal care in white-tailed deer: trade-off between maintenance and reproduction under food restriction. Anim. Behav. 75, 235–243. Thompson, I.D., Colgan, P.W., 1987. Numerical responses of martens to a food shortage in Northcentral Ontario. J. Wildlife Manage. 51, 824–835. Urton, E.J., Hobson, K.A., 2005. Intrapopulation variation in gray wolf isotope (δ15N and δ13C) profiles: implications for the ecology of individuals. Oecologia 145, 317–326. van Nostrand, F.C., Stephenson, A.B., 1964. Age determination for beavers by tooth development.J. Wildlife Manage. 28, 430–434. Ward, J.H., 1963. Hierarchical grouping to optimize an objective function. J. Am. Stat. Assoc. 58, 236–244. Wheatley, M., 1997a. Beaver, Castor canadensis, home range size and patterns of use in the taiga of southeastern Manitoba: III. Habitat variation. Can. Field-Nat. 111, 217–222. Wheatley, M., 1997b. Beaver, Castor canadensis, home range size and patterns of use in the taiga of southeastern Manitoba: I. Seasonal variation. Can. Field-Nat. 111, 204–210. Wigley, T.B., Roberts, T.H., Arner, D.H., 1983. Reproductive characteristics of beaver in Mississippi.J. Wildlife Manage. 47, 1172–1177. Williams, C.L., Breck, S.W., Baker, B.W., 2004. Genetic methods improve accuracy of gender determination in beavers. J. Mammal. 85, 1145–1148. Windels, S.K., 2008. 2007 aerial beaver survey, Voyageurs National Park. Report to Voyageurs National Park, 11 pp.