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Winter sleep with room service : denning behaviour of brown bears with access to anthropogenic food
ID Krofel, Miha (Avtor), ID Špacapan, Matija (Avtor), ID Jerina, Klemen (Avtor)

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MD5: C269A0BD15D90DCD2A8293C21EC8CB3C
PID: 20.500.12556/rul/36a19031-e27a-4d0a-a7f4-f49e3e64ce1d

Izvleček
Large quantities of food subsidies provided by humans to animal communities have the potential to change a variety of animal life traits, including denning behaviour of facultative hibernators like bears. Brown bears Ursus arctos regularly use anthropogenic food, but it has remained unclear if human food subsidies affect their hibernation and denning behaviour, despite the consequences this could have for bear interactions with humans and other species. We studied denning behaviour of European brown bears in Slovenia, where intensive supplemental feeding with corn is practiced throughout the year, including winter. We used GPS telemetry data to locate den sites and to monitor bear denning chronology. We conducted a meta-analysis to compare our results with other bear populations across Europe, Asia and North America. A consistent relationship between latitude and time spent denning was observed for male and female brown bears across the species’ range (for each degree of latitude northwards, denning period increased for 3.1 days), and males on average denned 10.3 days longer than females throughout the latitudinal gradient. However, our study area deviated strongly from regions where supplemental feeding was not practiced. In Slovenia, denning period averaged 82 days for females and 57 days for males, which was 45 and 56% shorter compared to the time predicted for this latitude, respectively. We also observed regular den abandonments (61% of bears abandoned dens, on average 1.9 times per winter). During the winter period bears increased use of supplemental feeding sites for 61% compared to the non-denning period. We conclude that the availability of anthropogenic food is an important driver of denning behaviour in brown bears. Reduction in the denning period increases the potential for bear interactions with other species, including humans, and we highlight possible management and ecological implications of this human-caused perturbation to denning behaviour of wild ursids.

Jezik:Angleški jezik
Ključne besede:hibernation, denning behaviour, supplemental feeding, anthropogenic food, Ursus arctos, meta-analysis, brown bear.
Vrsta gradiva:Znanstveno delo
Tipologija:1.01 - Izvirni znanstveni članek
Organizacija:BF - Biotehniška fakulteta
Št. strani:Str. 8-14
Številčenje:#Vol. #302, #iss. #1
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-96701 Povezava se odpre v novem oknu
UDK:630*15
ISSN pri članku:0952-8369
DOI:10.1111/jzo.12421 Povezava se odpre v novem oknu
COBISS.SI-ID:4578982 Povezava se odpre v novem oknu
Datum objave v RUL:20.10.2017
Število ogledov:1893
Število prenosov:843
Metapodatki:XML DC-XML DC-RDF
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Gradivo je del revije

Naslov:Journal of zoology
Skrajšan naslov:J. zool.
Založnik:Zoological Society of London
COBISS.SI-ID:6941401 Povezava se odpre v novem oknu

Licence

Licenca:CC BY-NC-ND 4.0, Creative Commons Priznanje avtorstva-Nekomercialno-Brez predelav 4.0 Mednarodna
Povezava:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.sl
Opis:Najbolj omejujoča licenca Creative Commons. Uporabniki lahko prenesejo in delijo delo v nekomercialne namene in ga ne smejo uporabiti za nobene druge namene.
Začetek licenciranja:11.10.2017

Sekundarni jezik

Jezik:Slovenski jezik
Ključne besede:zimsko spanje, rjavi medved, prehranjevalne navade

Projekti

Financer:ARRS - Agencija za raziskovalno dejavnost Republike Slovenije
Številka projekta:P4-0059
Naslov:Gozd, gozdarstvo in obnovljivi gozdni viri

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