Abstract

We studied the habitat selection of pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) during seasonal migration; an important period in an animal’s annual cycle associated with broad-scale movements. We further decompose our understanding of migration habitat itself as the product of both broad- and fine-scale behavioral decisions and take a multi-scale approach to assess pronghorn spring and fall migration across the transboundary Northern Sagebrush Steppe region. We used a hierarchical habitat selection framework to assess a suite of natural and anthropogenic features that have been shown to influence selection patterns of pronghorn at both broad (migratory neighborhood) and fine (migratory pathway) scales. We then combined single-scale predictions into a scale-integrated step selection function (ISSF) map to assess its effectiveness in predicting migration route habitat. During spring, pronghorn selected for native grasslands, areas of high forage productivity (NDVI), and avoided human activity (i.e., roads and oil and natural gas wells). During fall, pronghorn selected for native grasslands, larger streams and rivers, and avoided roads. We detected avoidance of paved roads, unpaved roads, and wells at broad spatial scales, but no response to these features at fine scales. In other words, migratory pronghorn responded more strongly to anthropogenic features when selecting a broad neighborhood through which to migrate than when selecting individual steps along their migratory pathway. Our results demonstrate that scales of migratory route selection are hierarchically nested within each other from broader (second-order) to finer scales (third-order). In addition, we found other variables during particular migratory periods (i.e., native grasslands in spring) were selected for across scales indicating their importance for pronghorn. The mapping of ungulate migration habitat is a topic of high conservation relevance. In some applications, corridors are mapped according to telemetry location data from a sample of animals, with the assumption that the sample adequately represents habitat for the entire population. Our use of multi-scale modelling to predict resource selection during migration shows promise and may offer another relevant alternative for use in future conservation planning and land management decisions where telemetry-based sampling is unavailable or incomplete.

Highlights

  • Animals require habitat, defined as the abiotic and biotic resources and conditions that promote occupancy and population persistence, to meet annual life-history requirements [1]

  • We studied the habitat selection of pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) during seasonal migration; an important period in an animal’s annual cycle associated with broad-scale movements

  • The mapping of ungulate migration habitat is a topic of high conservation relevance

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Summary

Introduction

Animals require habitat, defined as the abiotic and biotic resources and conditions that promote occupancy and population persistence, to meet annual life-history requirements [1]. Study of wildlife-habitat relationships has brought forth the importance of spatial scale as a nested hierarchy of lenses through which to view animal preferences [2]. The boundaries of species’ ranges convey one scale-specific definition of habitat while at fine scales the use of individual food items convey another. Intertwined within all of these spatiotemporal definitions of habitat are the movements of animals themselves, or the means by which they access such resources. Animal movements range in scale from individual bites of twigs on a plant to intercontinental migrations between seasonal ranges. We study the habitat selection of animals during seasonal migration; a specific and important period in an animal’s annual cycle associated with broad-scale movements. We further decompose our understanding of migration habitat itself as the product of both broad- and fine-scale behavioral decisions

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