Movement behavior in a dominant ungulate underlies successful adjustment to a rapidly changing landscape following megafire

Movement Ecology
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Abstract

Background

Movement plays a key role in allowing animal species to adapt to sudden environmental shifts. Anthropogenic climate and land use change have accelerated the frequency of some of these extreme disturbances, including megafire. These megafires dramatically alter ecosystems and challenge the capacity of several species to adjust to a rapidly changing landscape. Ungulates and their movement behaviors play a central role in the ecosystem functions of fire-prone ecosystems around the world. Previous work has shown behavioral plasticity is an important mechanism underlying whether large ungulates are able to adjust to recent changes in their environments effectively. Ungulates may respond to the immediate effects of megafire by adjusting their movement and behavior, but how these responses persist or change over time following disturbance is poorly understood.

Methods

We examined how an ecologically dominant ungulate with strong site fidelity, Columbian black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus), adjusted its movement and behavior in response to an altered landscape following a megafire. To do so, we collected GPS data from 21 individual female deer over the course of a year to compare changes in home range size over time and used resource selection functions (RSFs) and hidden Markov movement models (HMMs) to assess changes in behavior and habitat selection.

Results

We found compelling evidence of adaptive capacity across individual deer in response to megafire. Deer avoided exposed and severely burned areas that lack forage and could be riskier for predation immediately following megafire, but they later altered these behaviors to select areas that burned at higher severities, potentially to take advantage of enhanced forage.

Conclusions

These results suggest that despite their high site fidelity, deer can navigate altered landscapes to track rapid shifts in encounter risk with predators and resource availability. This successful adjustment of movement and behavior following extreme disturbance could help facilitate resilience at broader ecological scales.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Movement behavior in a dominant ungulate underlies successful adjustment to a rapidly changing landscape following megafire
Series title Movement Ecology
DOI 10.1186/s40462-024-00488-4
Volume 12
Publication Date July 31, 2024
Year Published 2024
Language English
Publisher BMC
Contributing office(s) Coop Res Unit Seattle
Description 53, 15 p.
Country United States
State California
County Mendocino County
Other Geospatial Hopland Research and Extension Center
Additional publication details