The effects of breeding status on common raven movement, home range, and habitat selection
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Abstract
Anthropogenic infrastructure has contributed to increasing common raven (Corvus corax) abundance across the Great Basin region of the United States, particularly in sagebrush ecosystems, where high raven densities are correlated with reduced sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) nest survival. Our understanding of how raven reproductive behavior affects sage-grouse nest predation is limited, especially considering their overlapping breeding seasons. Understanding differences in space use and resource selection between breeding and non-breeding ravens could help identify high-use areas and corresponding predation risk for sage-grouse nests. We analyzed space use and resource selection of breeding (n = 13) and non-breeding (n = 32) global positioning system (GPS)-marked ravens in Nevada, USA (2017–2022) during the breeding season (1 March–31 June). We compared home-range size, core area size, step lengths, and resource selection within a Bayesian framework with inference made by comparing Bayesian credible intervals (CRI). We generated home range and core area estimates using autocorrelated kernel density methods. We did not find a difference in home range size between breeding (469.33 km2, 95% CRI = 228.79–709.45 km2) and non-breeding (525.26 km2, 95% CRI = 410.71–654.10 km2) ravens. However, breeding ravens had smaller core areas (10.77 km2, 95% CRI = 3.16–35.78 km2) and shorter step lengths (1,160.33 m/hr, 95% CRI = 1,087.78–1,277.17 m/hr) than non-breeding ravens (core area = 279.50 km2, 95% CRI = 206.77–363.72 km2; step length = 1,953.74 m/hr, 95% CRI = 1,898.42–2,009.56 m/hr). Ravens in both breeding classes selected high normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and low annual grass and shrub cover, but non-breeding ravens showed stronger selection for low annual grass and shrub cover areas. We found strong differences in selection between breeding classes for 6 of our 9 covariates: distance to road, solar radiation, distance to natural water, distance to forest edge, percent annual grass cover, and percent shrub cover. Non-breeding ravens concentrated activity near forest edges, natural water sources, and anthropogenic features, whereas breeding ravens focused activity close to their nests. Our findings suggest that raven management could be more effective if it targeted areas with high NDVI and low annual grass and shrub cover, especially in anthropogenically modified landscapes and near forest edges, and prevented raven nest establishment near prey populations of concern.
Study Area
| Publication type | Article |
|---|---|
| Publication Subtype | Journal Article |
| Title | The effects of breeding status on common raven movement, home range, and habitat selection |
| Series title | Journal of Wildlife Management |
| DOI | 10.1002/jwmg.70004 |
| Volume | 89 |
| Publication Date | March 31, 2025 |
| Year Published | 2025 |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | The Wildlife Society |
| Contributing office(s) | Western Ecological Research Center |
| Description | e70004, 20 p. |
| Country | United States |
| State | Nevada |