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201304Aug15:26

How the return of wolves makes bears fat enough for hiber­na­tion in Yellowstone

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 04 August 2013 | mod­i­fied 28 June 2014
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A new study sug­gests that the return of wolves to Yel­low­stone National Park is begin­ning to bring back a key part of the diet of griz­zly bears that has been miss­ing for much of the past cen­tury — berries that help bears put on fat before going into hibernation.

It’s one of the first reports to iden­tify the inter­ac­tions between these large, impor­tant preda­tors, based on com­plex eco­log­i­cal processes. It was pub­lished by sci­en­tists from Ore­gon State Uni­ver­sity (OSU) and Wash­ing­ton State Uni­ver­sity online on 29 July in the Jour­nal of Ani­mal Ecol­ogy.

Stud­ies like this also point to the need for an eco­log­i­cally effec­tive num­ber of wolves
Robert Beschta, co-​author, OSU pro­fes­sor emer­i­tus »
The researchers found that the level of berries con­sumed by Yel­low­stone griz­zlies is sig­nif­i­cantly higher now that shrubs are start­ing to recover fol­low­ing the re-​introduction of wolves, which have reduced over-​browsing by elk herds. The berry bushes also pro­duce flow­ers of value to pol­li­na­tors like but­ter­flies, insects and hum­ming­birds; food for other small and large mam­mals; and spe­cial ben­e­fits to birds.

Grizzly bear in Yellowstone NPThe report said that berries may be suf­fi­ciently impor­tant to griz­zly bear diet and health that they could be con­sid­ered in legal dis­putes — as is white pine nut avail­abil­ity now — about whether or not to change the “threat­ened” sta­tus of griz­zly bears under the Endan­gered Species Act in the United States.

“Wild fruit is typ­i­cally an impor­tant part of griz­zly bear diet, espe­cially in late sum­mer when they are try­ing to gain weight as rapidly as pos­si­ble before win­ter hiber­na­tion,” said William Rip­ple, a pro­fes­sor in the OSU Depart­ment of For­est Ecosys­tems and Soci­ety, and lead author on the arti­cle. “Berries are one part of a diverse food source that aids bear sur­vival and repro­duc­tion, and at cer­tain times of the year can be more than half their diet in many places in North America.”

When wolves were removed from Yel­low­stone early in the 1900s, increased brows­ing by elk herds caused the demise of young aspen and wil­low trees — a favourite food — along with many berry-​producing shrubs and tall, herba­ceous plants. The recov­ery of those trees and other food sources since the re-​introduction of wolves in the 1990s has had a pro­found impact on the Yel­low­stone ecosys­tem, researchers say, even though it’s still in the very early stages.

“Stud­ies like this also point to the need for an eco­log­i­cally effec­tive num­ber of wolves,” said co-​author Robert Beschta, an OSU pro­fes­sor emer­i­tus. “As we learn more about the cas­cad­ing effects they have on ecosys­tems, the issue may be more than hav­ing just enough indi­vid­ual wolves so they can sur­vive as a species. In some sit­u­a­tions, we may wish to con­sider the num­bers nec­es­sary to help con­trol over­brows­ing, allow tree and shrub recov­ery, and restore ecosys­tem health.”

A short video about the re-​introduction of wolves in Yel­low­stone National Park and the pos­si­ble cas­cad­ing effects on Yellowstone’s ecosystems:

As wolves help reduce elk num­bers in Yel­low­stone and allow tree and shrub recov­ery, researchers said, this improves the diet and health of griz­zly bears. In turn, a healthy griz­zly bear pop­u­la­tion pro­vides a sec­ond avenue of con­trol on wild ungu­lates, espe­cially on new­borns in the spring time.

Yel­low­stone has a wide vari­ety of nutri­tious berries — ser­vice­berry, chokecherry, buf­faloberry, twin­berry, huck­le­berry and oth­ers — that are highly palat­able to bears. These shrubs are also eaten by elk and thus likely declined as elk pop­u­la­tions grew over time. With the return of wolves, the new study found the per­cent­age of fruit in griz­zly bear scat in recent years almost dou­bled dur­ing August.

Because the abun­dant elk have been an impor­tant food for Yel­low­stone griz­zly bears for the past half-​century, the increased sup­ply of berries may help off­set the reduced avail­abil­ity of elk in the bears’ diet in recent years. More research is needed regard­ing the effects of wolves on plants and ani­mals con­sumed by griz­zly bears.

There is prece­dent for high lev­els of ungu­late her­bivory caus­ing prob­lems for griz­zly bears, who are omni­vores that eat both plants and ani­mals. Before going extinct in the Amer­i­can South­west by the early 1900s, griz­zly bear diets shifted toward live­stock depre­da­tion, the report noted, because of lack of plant-​based food caused by live­stock over­graz­ing. And, in the absence of wolves, black bears went extinct on Anti­costi Island in Canada after over-​browsing of berry shrubs by intro­duced while-​tailed deer.

Increases in berry pro­duc­tion in Yel­low­stone may also pro­vide a buffer against other ecosys­tem shifts, the researchers noted — white­bark pine nut pro­duc­tion, a favoured bear food, may be fac­ing pres­sure from cli­mate change. Griz­zly bear sur­vival declined dur­ing years of low nut production.

Live­stock graz­ing in griz­zly bear habi­tat adja­cent to the national park, and bison her­bivory in the park, likely also con­tribute to high for­ag­ing pres­sure on shrubs and forbs, the report said. In addi­tion to elim­i­nat­ing wolf-​livestock con­flicts, retir­ing live­stock allot­ments in the griz­zly bear recov­ery zone adja­cent to Yel­low­stone could ben­e­fit bears through increases in plant foods.

(Source: Ore­gon State Uni­ver­sity news release, 29.07.2013)

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