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201616Jan17:56

Man’s best friend is also Bear’s best friend

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 16 Jan­u­ary 2016 | mod­i­fied 16 Jan­u­ary 2016
Archived

Camas detection dogA recently released study from Wildlife Con­ser­va­tion Soci­ety (WCS) details a new method using “detec­tion dogs,” genetic analy­sis, and sci­en­tific mod­els to assess habi­tat suit­abil­ity for bears in an area link­ing the Greater Yel­low­stone Ecosys­tem (GYE) to the north­ern Rocky Moun­tains in the USA.

The method, accord­ing to the authors, offers an effec­tive, non-​invasive approach to the col­lec­tion of data that could play a vital role in the fur­ther recov­ery of griz­zly bears dur­ing the com­ing decades.

The use of detec­tion dogs allowed us to quan­tify and map key areas of habi­tat for black bears in the Cen­ten­nial Moun­tains located along the Idaho-​Montana bor­der west of Yel­low­stone National Park
Jon Beck­mann, lead author, WCS Scientist »

Black bears are a proxy species use­ful for pre­dict­ing likely griz­zly bear habi­tat. With recov­ery, a larger griz­zly bear pop­u­la­tion needs room to roam and to recon­nect with other pop­u­la­tions,” Beck­mann said. “The Cen­ten­nial Moun­tains region of the U.S. north­ern Rock­ies can pro­vide room and safe link­ages — crit­i­cal to con­nect­ing the bear pop­u­la­tion in the GYE area to oth­ers fur­ther north and west”.

Dur­ing the study, pub­lished in the 2015 Q4 issue of the jour­nal West­ern North Amer­i­can Nat­u­ral­ist, two Labrador retriev­ers and two Ger­man shep­herds owned and trained by Work­ing Dogs for Con­ser­va­tion, located 616 scat sam­ples of black bears and 24 of griz­zly bears (iden­ti­fied by DNA extrac­tion and analy­sis) in the 2,500 km2 study area.

Dogs excel at search­ing for mul­ti­ple scents at once, even if one is far more com­mon than the other,” accord­ing to Aimee Hurt, Work­ing Dogs for Con­ser­va­tion co-​founder. “In this case, the dogs eas­ily alerted us to a mul­ti­tude of black bear scat, while also read­ily locat­ing the rare griz­zly bear scat, result­ing in a mul­ti­tude of data points and a robust model.”

Why Dogs?
The con­ser­va­tion detec­tion dogs of ‘Work­ing Dogs for Con­ser­va­tion’ are agile, portable, and end­lessly train­able. They are an effi­cient, highly sen­si­tive, and non-​invasive way to gather high-​quality data. They per­form well in all kind of habi­tats and temperatures.….

(footage credit: Julian Braatvedt at Vimeo)

Grizzly bear yellowstoneWe rec­og­nize that black bears do not always uti­lize the land­scape in pre­cisely the same man­ner as griz­zly bears,” said Beck­mann. “But given the paucity of griz­zly bears in the study area — espe­cially dur­ing the years of our study — our approach, data, and model have value to griz­zly bear con­ser­va­tion and man­age­ment. This is espe­cially true given that black bears and griz­zly bears in the GYE are known to uti­lize very sim­i­lar habi­tats spa­tially, but at dif­fer­ent times.”

Plug­ging the scat sam­ple loca­tion data into their sci­en­tific model, the sci­en­tists exam­ined the land­scape with respect to habi­tat para­me­ters, pri­vate lands, pub­lic land man­age­ment and human activ­ity in the area. Results of mod­el­ling pro­vided insight into bear habi­tat use and resource selec­tion patterns.

Among the find­ings it was deter­mined that dis­tance to roads mat­ters. Bears use habi­tat that is far­ther from roads, and when road den­sity increased within 4 kilo­me­tres of a loca­tion bears used that habi­tat less. Bears also used a habi­tat less if it were high ele­va­tion, or pri­vately owned.

Value of the study
With this infor­ma­tion land man­agers, land trusts, and oth­ers will be bet­ter informed to make bear habi­tat man­age­ment and con­ser­va­tion deci­sions. This study may also inform human-​bear con­flict avoid­ance, and so help peo­ple and bears bet­ter co-​exist.


(Source: WCS news release, 14.01.2016)


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