HUMAN ACTIVITY MEDIATES A TROPHIC CASCADE CAUSED BY WOLVES
@article{Hebblewhite2005HUMANAM, title={HUMAN ACTIVITY MEDIATES A TROPHIC CASCADE CAUSED BY WOLVES}, author={Mark Hebblewhite and Clifford A. White and Clifford G. Nietvelt and John A Mckenzie and Tomas E. Hurd and John M. Fryxell and Suzanne E. Bayley and Paul C. Paquet}, journal={Ecology}, year={2005}, volume={86}, pages={2135-2144} }
Experimental evidence of trophic cascades initiated by large vertebrate predators is rare in terrestrial ecosystems. [] Key Method We compared effects of recolonizing wolves on these response variables using the log response ratio between the low-wolf and high-wolf treatments. Elk population density diverged over time in the two treatments, such that elk were an order of magnitude more numerous in the low-wolf area compared to the high-wolf area at the end of the study. Annual survival of adult female elk…
451 Citations
Indirect effects and traditional trophic cascades: a test involving wolves, coyotes, and pronghorn.
- Environmental ScienceEcology
- 2008
The hypothesis that mesopredator release of coyotes contributes to high rates of coyote predation on pronghorn fawns is supported, and the importance of alternative food web pathways in structuring the dynamics of terrestrial systems is demonstrated.
Are wolves saving Yellowstone's aspen? A landscape-level test of a behaviorally mediated trophic cascade.
- Environmental ScienceEcology
- 2010
It is found that the impacts of elk browsing on aspen demography are not diminished in sites where elk are at higher risk of predation by wolves, and the need to further evaluate how trophic cascades are mediated by predator-prey life history and ecological context is suggested.
The Return of the Wolf
- Environmental Science
- 2011
Investigation of the effects of wolves on prey species, competitors, and the scavenging guild after the re-colonization by wolves of the Scandinavian Peninsula found apex predators will have relatively little influence on other species in areas where human activities have a large impact on animal densities.
Wolves, trophic cascades, and rivers in the Olympic National Park, USA
- Environmental Science
- 2008
Gray wolves (Canis lupus) were extirpated in the early 1900s from the Olympic Peninsula of northwestern Washington. Thus, we studied potential cascading effects of wolf removal by undertaking a…
The Return of the Wolf – Effects on Prey , Competitors and Scavengers
- Environmental Science
- 2011
Apex predators may have both direct and indirect effects on other species through predation and competition. I investigated the effects of wolves (Canis lupus) on prey species, competitors (including…
Foraging and feeding ecology of the gray wolf (Canis lupus): lessons from Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA.
- Environmental ScienceThe Journal of nutrition
- 2006
As patterns of wolf density, prey density, weather, and vulnerability of prey change, in comparison with the conditions of the study period described here, it is predicted that there will also be significant changes in wolf predation patterns and feeding behavior.
Effects of predation risk on elk ( Cervus elaphus ) landscape use in a wolf ( Canis lupus ) dominated system
- Environmental Science
- 2015
Food acquisition and predation avoidance are key drivers of herbivore behaviour. We investigated the interaction of top-down (predator) and bottom-up (food, fire, thermal) effects by measuring the…
Effects of predation risk on elk (Cervus elaphus) landscape use in a wolf (Canis lupus) dominated system
- Environmental Science
- 2015
The interaction of top-down (predator) and bottom-up (food, fire, thermal) effects are investigated by measuring the relationship between wolf predation risk perceived by elk and elk landscape use and predictive models of elk pellet density were created.
Trophic cascades: linking ungulates to shrub-dependent birds and butterflies.
- Environmental ScienceThe Journal of animal ecology
- 2013
These results demonstrate a cascade resulting from hyper-abundant ungulates on yellow warblers and Canadian tiger swallowtails through reductions in shrub cover and larval host plant density that can decouple top-down regulation of productive temperate ecosystems.
Reintroduced wolves and hunting limit the abundance of a subordinate apex predator in a multi-use landscape
- Environmental ScienceProceedings of the Royal Society B
- 2020
Overall, puma dynamics in the authors' multi-use landscape were more strongly influenced by top-down forces exhibited by a reintroduced apex predator, than by human hunting or bottom-up forces (prey abundance) subsidized by humans.
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 45 REFERENCES
Trophic cascades among wolves, elk and aspen on Yellowstone National Park’s northern range
- Environmental Science
- 2001
A MAMMALIAN PREDATOR-PREY IMBALANCE: GRIZZLY BEAR AND WOLF EXTINCTION AFFECT AVIAN NEOTROPICAL MIGRANTS
- Environmental Science
- 2001
Because most large, terrestrial mammalian predators have already been lost from more than 95-99% of the contiguous United States and Mexico, many ecological communities are either missing dominant…
WOLVES INFLUENCE ELK MOVEMENTS: BEHAVIOR SHAPES A TROPHIC CASCADE IN YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK
- Environmental Science
- 2005
A trophic cascade recently has been reported among wolves, elk, and aspen on the northern winter range of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA, but the mechanisms of indirect interactions within…
Are large predators keystone species in Neotropical forests ? The evidence from Barro Colorado Island.
- Environmental Science
- 1994
An evaluation of the qualitative historical evidence indicates that as cats were eliminated from BCI by poaching, many potential prey species population densities increased, however, these increases were not sustained, and may reflect natural population variability rather than the status of large cats.
Ecological Meltdown in Predator-Free Forest Fragments
- Environmental ScienceScience
- 2001
The densities of seedlings and saplings of canopy trees are severely reduced on herbivore-affected islands, providing evidence of a trophic cascade unleashed in the absence of top-down regulation.
Behaviorally mediated trophic cascades : Effects of predation risk on food web interactions
- Environmental Science
- 1997
Trophic cascades are regarded as important signals for top-down control of food web dynamics. Although there is clear evidence supporting the existence of trophic cascades, the mechanisms driving…
UNGULATE POPULATION MODELS WITH PREDATION: A CASE STUDY WITH THE NORTH AMERICAN MOOSE'
- Environmental Science
- 1994
Examining moose-wolf interactions over a broad spectrum of moose densities with the primary objective to test empirically whether wolf predation can regulate moose numbers suggests that moose would stabilize at 2.0 moose/km2 in the absence of predators, and at - 1.3 moose/(km2) in the presence of a single predator, the wolf.
Influences of herbivory and water on willow in elk winter range
- Environmental Science
- 2002
Elimination of large predators and reduced hunter harvest have led to concerns that an increasing ell (Cervus elaphus) population may be adversely affecting vegetation on the low-elevation elk winter…
CARNIVORES AS FOCAL SPECIES FOR CONSERVATION PLANNING IN THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN REGION
- Environmental Science
- 2001
Viability analysis of well-selected focal species can complement ecosystem-level conservation planning by revealing thresholds in habitat area and landscape connectivity. Mammalian carnivores are…