Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Version of Record
Publication Date
12-2015
Departmental Paper Identifier
NRM-166
Abstract
Increased understanding of the influence of habitat (e.g., composition, patch size) and intrinsic (e.g., age, birth mass) factors on survival of neonatal pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) is a prerequisite to successful management programs, particularly as they relate to population dynamics and the role of population models in adaptive species management. Nevertheless, few studies have presented empirical data quantifying the influence of habitat variables on survival of neonatal pronghorn. During 2002–2005, we captured and radiocollared 116 neonates across two sites in western South Dakota. We documented 31 deaths during our study, of which coyote (Canis latrans) predation (n = 15) was the leading cause of mortality. We used known fate analysis in Program MARK to investigate the influence of intrinsic and habitat variables on neonatal survival. We generated a priori models that we grouped into habitat and intrinsic effects. The highest-ranking model indicated that neonate mortality was best explained by site, percent grassland, and open water habitat; 90-day survival (0.80; 90% CI = 0.71–0.88) declined 23% when grassland and water increased from 80.1 to 92.3% and 0.36 to 0.40%, respectively, across 50% natal home ranges. Further, our results indicated that grassland patch size and shrub density were important predictors of neonate survival; neonate survival declined 17% when shrub density declined from 5.0 to 2.5 patches per 100 ha. Excluding the site covariates, intrinsic factors (i.e., sex, age, birth mass, year, parturition date) were not important predictors of survival of neonatal pronghorns. Further, neonatal survival may depend on available land cover and interspersion of habitats. We have demonstrated that maintaining minimum and maximum thresholds for habitat factors (e.g., percentages of grassland and open water patches, density of shrub patches) throughout natal home ranges will in turn, ensure relatively high (>0.50) neonatal survival rates, especially as they relate to coyote predation. Thus, landscape level variables (particularly percentages of open water, grassland habitats, and shrub density) should be incorporated into the development or implementation of pronghorn management plans across sagebrush steppe communities of the western Dakotas, and potentially elsewhere within the geographic range of pronghorn.
Publication Title
PLoS ONE
Volume
10
Issue
12
First Page
e0144026
Pages
17
Format
application/pdf
Language
en
DOI of Published Version
10.1371/journal. pone.0144026
Publisher
PLoS ONE
Rights
This is an open access article, free of all copyright. This item is in the public domain. CC0 1.0
Recommended Citation
Jacques, Christopher N.; Jenks, Jonathan A.; Grovenburg, Troy W.; and Klaver, Robert Wayne, "Influence of Habitat and Intrinsic Characteristics on Survival of Neonatal Pronghorn" (2015). Natural Resource Management Faculty Publications. 56.
https://openprairie.sdstate.edu/nrm_pubs/56
Comments
This work was originally published in PLoS ONE 10(12): e0144026.