Saturday, November 30, 2019
Wolf Predation Essays - Predation, LotkaVolterra Equations, Caribou
  Wolf Predation      Effects of Wolf Predation  Abstract: This paper discusses four hypotheses to explain the effects   of wolf predation on prey populations of large ungulates. The four   proposed hypotheses examined are the predation limiting hypothesis,   the predation regulating hypothesis, the predator pit hypothesis, and   the stable limit cycle hypothesis. There is much research literature   that discusses how these hypotheses can be used to interpret various   data sets obtained from field studies. It was concluded that the   predation limiting hypothesis fit most study cases, but that more   research is necessary to account for multiple predator - multiple prey   relationships.   The effects of predation can have an enormous impact on the   ecological organization and structure of communities. The processes of   predation affect virtually every species to some degree or another.   Predation can be defined as when members of one species eat (and/or   kill) those of another species. The specific type of predation between   wolves and large ungulates involves carnivores preying on herbivores.   Predation can have many possible effects on the interrelations of   populations. To draw any correlations between the effects of these   predator-prey interactions requires studies of a long duration, and   statistical analysis of large data sets representative of the   populations as a whole. Predation could limit the prey distribution   and decrease abundance. Such limitation may be desirable in the case   of pest species, or undesirable to some individuals as with game  animals or endangered species. Predation may also act as a major   selective force. The effects of predator prey coevolution can explain   many evolutionary adaptations in both predator and prey species.   The effects of wolf predation on species of large ungulates have   proven to be controversial and elusive. There have been many different   models proposed to describe the processes operating on populations   influenced by wolf predation. Some of the proposed mechanisms include   the predation limiting hypothesis, the predation regulating   hypothesis, the predator pit hypothesis, and the stable limit cycle   hypothesis (Boutin 1992). The purpose of this paper is to assess the   empirical data on population dynamics and attempt to determine if one   of the four hypotheses is a better model of the effects of wolf   predation on ungulate population densities.   The predation limiting hypothesis proposes that predation is the   primary factor that limits prey density. In this non- equilibrium  model recurrent fluctuations occur in the prey population. This   implies that the prey population does not return to some particular   equilibrium after deviation. The predation limiting hypothesis   involves a density independent mechanism. The mechanism might apply to   one prey - one predator systems (Boutin 1992). This hypothesis   predicts that losses of prey due to predation will be large enough to   halt prey population increase.   Many studies support the hypothesis that predation limits prey   density. Bergerud et al. (1983) concluded from their study of the   interrelations of wolves and moose in the Pukaskwa National Park that   wolf predation limited, and may have caused a decline in, the moose   population, and that if wolves were eliminated, the moose population   would increase until limited by some other regulatory factor, such as   food availability. However, they go on to point out that this upper   limit will not be sustainable, but will eventually lead to resource   depletion and population decline. Seip (1992) found that high wolf   predation on caribou in the Quesnel Lake area resulted in a decline in   the population, while low wolf predation in the Wells Gray Provincial   Park resulted in a slowly increasing population. Wolf predation at the   Quesnel Lake area remained high despite a fifty percent decline in the   caribou population, indicating that mortality due to predation was not   density-dependent within this range of population densities. Dale et   al. (1994), in their study of wolves and caribou in Gates National   Park and Preserve, showed that wolf predation can be an important   limiting factor at low caribou population densities, and may have an  anti-regulatory effect. They also state that wolf predation may affect   the distribution and abundance of caribou populations. Bergerud and   Ballard (1988), in their interpretation of the Nelchina caribou herd   case history, said that during and immediately following a reduction   in the wolf population, calf recruitment increased, which should   result in a future caribou population increase. Gasaway et al. (1983)   also indicated that wolf predation can sufficiently increase    
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