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Sammanfattning

Cervid (Cervidae) populations that are overabundant with respect to their food resources are expected to show declining physiological and reproductive fitness. A proactive solution to such declines is to integrate the monitoring of food resources with animal harvesting strategies, but there are few studies available to guide managers regarding which food resources to monitor and how to do so. In this study, we used a large, rare data set that included detailed absolute measures of available food quantities and browsing intensity from field inventories, to test their relationship with fitness indices of moose Alces alces in 24 management units in four regions across Norway. We found that calf body mass and calves seen per cow during the autumn hunt were strongly and positively related to the availability of tree forage, especially the species most selected for by the study moose (e.g., rowan [Sorbus aucuparia] and sallow [Salix caprea]). The strength of the correlations varied between regions, apparently being stronger where the moose were closer to being overabundant or had a legacy of past overabundance. As expected, the intensity of browsing on the three most common tree species, that is, birch (Betula spp.), rowan, and pine (Pinus sylvestris), was also negatively and strongly related to the fitness. We discuss how our approach to food monitoring can facilitate a management that proactively adjusts densities of moose, and possibly other cervids, to trends in food availability and browsing intensity, thereby avoiding detrimental effects of overabundance.

Nyckelord

carrying capacity; cervid; condition; fecundity; large herbivore; management; reproduction; ungulate; wildlife

Publicerad i

Ecosphere
2025, volym: 16, nummer: 12, artikelnummer: e70476
Utgivare: WILEY

SLU författare

UKÄ forskningsämne

Ekologi

Publikationens identifierare

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70476

Permanent länk till denna sida (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/145280