Abstract

Abstract. Fauna impacts its environment as well as spatial environment influences fauna space use. Forest management implies taking into account pressure from animals in fragile-balanced patches. Our goal is to propose maps that would benefit forest planning by reflecting individual movement and space use depending on the animal species and local spatiotemporal environment. The study case focuses on two species, roe deer and red deer, and on a forested site in the northeast of France. Movements of several individuals were analysed from collected GPS locations. Foraging places likely to correspond to intense research behaviour were computed using the First-Passage Time method. These places were assumed as being of interest and were characterized with landscape features and temporal information. Maps were produced to synthetize information about foraging places by defining adapted symbolizations. Then maps about functional space were proposed based on extrapolation of favourable or avoided areas from the characterized observed foraging places and space use. Landscape patches were mapped according to a gradient of potential interest by animals’ species, in order to highlight needs of specific planning actions in the forestry context. Map displays were driven by forestry end-use and designed so that to be compliant to a numeric geographical portal, giving access to different available on-line layers and computed created ones.

Highlights

  • Wildlife space use is closely related to the characteristics of spatial environment

  • Based on the GPS dataset of the study case, average daily distance covered by one individual is 8 km for roe deer and 10 km for red deer; average daily speeds are respectively for the two species 350 meters per hour and 450 meters per hour; covered areas are in average around respectively 0.1 km2 and 0.6 km2

  • Places of interest for fauna corresponding to foraging behaviour were analysed based on collected movement data and landscape descriptions

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Summary

Introduction

Wildlife space use is closely related to the characteristics of spatial environment. By its composition and structure, spatial environment influences the presence and movements of animals at individual, population and species levels (Ethier et al, 2011; Nellemann et al, 2001). For forest dwelling ungulates such as deers, habitat quality including food availability has an effect on individual characteristics like body mass or home range size, and on population dynamics and spatial distribution (Kjellander et al, 2006; Widmer et al, 2004). Locating the specific patches which call for the presence of animals is one key step in the whole process of forest management

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