Abstract

BackgroundSemiaquatic mammals require both aquatic and terrestrial habitats, particularly interfaces between the two habitats. As ecosystem engineers, American beaver (Castor canadensis) consume and fell a great amount of deciduous trees. We tested the prediction that open water and amounts of food resources, including hardwood forests (i.e., deciduous trees as the dominant form of vegetation), herbaceous and woody wetlands, and shrubs, would influence the second-order habitat selection (i.e., placing home ranges on the landscape) by American beaver, whereas the third-order habitat selection of American beaver would be associated with woody wetland and shrub edges. We investigated hierarchical habitat selection by American beaver using location data from very high frequency telemetry. Dirichlet-multinomial models were used to determine the second-order habitat selection at landscape scales. Bayesian spatial resource selection function was used to assess the third-order habitat selection within home ranges.ResultsSecond-order habitat selection by American beaver was associated with herbaceous wetland, shrubs, hardwood forest, grassland, and woody wetland more than open water bodies at landscape scales. At the third-order scale, American beaver selected herbaceous wetlands as well as the edges of shrubs and woody wetland within established home ranges.ConclusionsSpatial distributions of food resources affected both the second- and third-order habitat selection by American beaver. Herbaceous wetlands were more important habitat components than water bodies in the second- and third-order habitat selection by American beaver. Dirichlet-multinomial distribution models for the second-order habitat selection and Bayesian spatial resource selection functions for the third-order habitat selection do not need pseudo-absence locations, providing alternative approaches to the presence–absence methods for habitat selection by animals.

Highlights

  • Semiaquatic mammals require both aquatic and terrestrial habitats, interfaces between the two habitats

  • American beaver (Castor canadensis) are semiaquatic herbivorous mammals that feed on deciduous trees, shrubs, and aquatic plants [10,11,12]

  • Evidence supported that the second-order habitat selection by American beaver was not random

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Summary

Introduction

Semiaquatic mammals require both aquatic and terrestrial habitats, interfaces between the two habitats. We tested the prediction that open water and amounts of food resources, including hardwood forests (i.e., deciduous trees as the dominant form of vegetation), herbaceous and woody wetlands, and shrubs, would influence the second-order habitat selection (i.e., placing home ranges on the landscape) by American beaver, whereas the third-order habitat selection of American beaver would be associated with woody wetland and shrub edges. (i.e., third order or within home ranges) by semiaquatic mammals, herbivores, may depend on the distributions of food resources in proximity to water [5, 9]. No studies have evaluated the roles of food resources (e.g., deciduous trees and shrubs) and water bodies in the secondorder habitat selection and compared the second-order to third-order habitat selection by American beaver

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