Abstract
After centuries of range contraction, many megafauna species are recolonizing parts of Europe. One example is the red deer (Cervus elaphus), which was able to expand its range and is now found in half the areas it inhabited in the beginning of the 19th century. Herbivores are important ecosystem engineers, influencing e.g. vegetation. Knowledge on their habitat selection and their influence on ecosystems might be crucial for future landscape management, especially for hybrid and novel ecosystems emerging in post-industrial landscapes. In this study, red deer habitat selection was studied in a former brown-coal mining area in Denmark. Here, natural settings were severely changed during the mining activity and its current landscape is in large parts managed by hunters as suitable deer habitat. We assessed red deer habitat preferences through feces presence and camera traps combined with land cover data from vegetation sampling, remote sensing and official geographic data. Red deer occurrence was negatively associated with human disturbance and positively associated with forage availability, tree cover and mean terrain height. Apparently, red deer are capable of recolonizing former industrial landscapes quite well if key conditions such as forage abundance and cover are appropriate. In the absence of carnivores, human disturbance, such as a hunting regime is a main reason why deer avoid certain areas. The resulting spatial heterogeneity red deer showed in their habitat use of the study area might be a tool to preserve mosaic landscapes of forest and open habitats and thus promote biodiversity in abandoned post-industrial landscapes.
Highlights
Abandoned industrial areas such as former coal mining sites, sand and gravel pits, stone quarries, suburban landfills and extracted peatlands are becoming ever more common in today’s anthropogenic landscapes [1]
The best logistic regression model included all six variables that were identified in the Principal Component Analysis (PCA) (AIC = 84.7, the best model excluding A_CONI had Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) = 87.2)
Our study results support hypothesis one, that red deer habitat selection is dependent on the availability of forage at a site; hypothesis two, that red deer habitat selection is dependent on forest cover; hypothesis four, that red deer habitat selection is dependent on the terrain height and hypothesis five; that red deer habitat selection is dependent on human activities
Summary
Abandoned industrial areas such as former coal mining sites, sand and gravel pits, stone quarries, suburban landfills and extracted peatlands are becoming ever more common in today’s anthropogenic landscapes [1]. Habitat selection by red deer in a former brown-coal mining area
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