Wyoming researchers have concluded that while wolves may eat elk,
they don’t necessarily cause elk other detrimental effects, such as
weight loss.
In the last of three studies from the University of Wyoming and the Wyoming Game and Fish Department, scientists found that migratory elk in wolf-occupied areas didn’t have worse nutrition or less body fat than other elk, a conclusion that contradicts some recent research from the greater Yellowstone ecosystem.
In the last of three studies from the University of Wyoming and the Wyoming Game and Fish Department, scientists found that migratory elk in wolf-occupied areas didn’t have worse nutrition or less body fat than other elk, a conclusion that contradicts some recent research from the greater Yellowstone ecosystem.
Between 2007 and 2010,
biologists put GPS collars on 70 elk in migratory and resident herds, as
well as a few wolves from four packs that resided in the same area.
Using the GPS data, the scientists could record when the wolves came
close to the elk and how the elk moved when wolves were near.
The researchers
recaptured some of the collared elk and measured their body fat and
pregnancy rates in March of each year, right before they’d have their
fawns.
Predation has a direct
effect on elk population, but some research, including studies by
Montana State University biologist Scott Creel, suggested that wolves
cause elk to change their feeding behavior so that they didn’t eat as
well.
When predators are
around, Creel suggested that ungulates tend to be more vigilant and
sometimes move into more wooded areas where forage isn’t as plentiful.
The result would be elk cows with less body fat that produced fewer or
weaker fawns.
Creel’s analysis was more indirect in some cases, relying on analyses of elk feces and tissue samples.
In contrast, Arthur
Middleton, author of the Wyoming study, said his study used direct
measurements of interactions between specific animals. As a result, the
Wyoming data indicated that wolves don’t find elk that often, and when
they do, the elk don’t remain wary for long.
Migratory elk wintering
in central Wyoming, where wolves are more plentiful, had close
encounters with wolves about every nine days. Resident herds in eastern
Wyoming, where wolves are rare, dealt with wolves every 50 days.
Elk didn’t change their
behavior until wolves were less than a mile away. On average, wolves
stayed within that range for about five hours.
Once the wolves left, elk returned to normal foraging behavior within 24 hours.
In the migratory herd
that ran into wolves more often, the late winter body-fat measurements
were no lower than those in the almost predator-free resident herd.
The researchers concluded
that, outside of killing elk directly, the impact of wolves on elk
reproductive success was insignificant.
The authors also
suggested that there’s a difference between elk reaction to ambush
predators, such as mountain lions, and reaction to active hunters, like
wolves, which only come along once in a while.
Elk may learn to
associate certain types of habitat with mountain lions and be wary at
all times while in that habitat. But active predators can hunt anywhere,
so elk have no clues as to where they should be wary.
Also in open range, elk
can use defensive group behavior, such as bunching together, so they
don’t have to be constantly on the lookout.
The authors had
previously concluded that climate change and direct predation by bears
and wolves have more of a detrimental effect on migratory herds in
Wyoming.
Creel said his work
suggested that elk respond to wolves and that Middleton’s data found the
same thing. Creel said his studies were different because he was
observing elk herds in the Gallatin Canyon, where habitat patches are
smaller and elk aren’t roaming in larger herds through wide landscapes.
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