* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Workshop II: Fox Ecology, Stockholm, August 17 2015
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Workshop II: Fox Ecology, Stockholm, August 17 2015 Room: E306, Arrhenius Laboratory building Contact: Karin Norén ([email protected] ), Department of Zoology, Stockholm University 09.00-09.20 09.20-09.30 FIKA Introduction Karin Norén, Stockholm University Population ecology and conservation 09:30-09.50 Red fox ecology in a landscape gradient 09.50-10.30 10.30-10.50 10.50-11.10 11.10-11.20 11.20-11.40 Leg length adaptation in the Scandinavian red fox (Vulpes vulpes) The demography and of the Icelandic arctic fox: long term fluctuations AND stability SHORT BREAK Conservation work in practise: Saving the Endangered Fennoscandian Alopex SEFALO Arctic fox social organization Tomas Willebrand, Hedmark University Jan Englund Ester Rut Unnsteinsdottir, The Icelandic Institute of Natural History Anders Angerbjörn, Stockholm University Bodil Elmhagen, Stockholm University 11.40-13.40 LUNCH Genetics and taxonomy 13.40-14.00 Deep secrets revealed: A view into the phylogeography, historical demography, and speciation in the world's most basal canid, Urocyon spp 14.00-14.20 Peninsulas and islands in a sea of red: phylogeography and population substructure of the European red fox 14.20-14.40 Genomic variation and signatures of selection in European red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) 14.40-15.00 Genetic complexity of a simple behavioral pattern Benjamin N. Sacks, University of California, Davis Mark J. Statham, University of California, Davis Allan McDevitt, Mammal Research Institute, Poland Anna Kukekova, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 15.00-15.20 FIKA Community ecology 15.20-15.40 The arctic fox as model system to study trophic interactions 15.40-16.00 Species interactions along a productivity gradient mesopredator dynamics in different ecosystems 15.30-15.50 The red fox (Vulpes vulpes) in a trophic interaction perspective 15.50-16.10 Focused sampling of red fox faeces for identification of Echinococcus multilocularis in Sweden 16.10-16.30 Interference in the tundra predator guild studied using local ecological knowledge Future research projects and collaboration 16.30-16.45 Knowledge about fox migration needed to predict the 16.45-17.00 17.00-17.15 spread of Echinococcus multilocularis The ECOFUNC project Prey preferences of red foxes in their native and introduced ranges 1 Dominique Berteaux, Université du Québec à Rimouski Rasmus Erlandsson, Stockholm University Marianne Pasanen Mortensen, Stockholm University Andrea Miller, Swedish University of Agriculture Siw Killengreen, The Arctic University of Norway Helene Wahlström, National Veterinary Institute Nina Eide, Norwegian Institute for Nature Research Matt Hayward, Bangor University ABSTRACTS Red fox ecology in a landscape gradient Tomas Willebrand, M. Odden, G. Samelius, J. Englund In this red fox project we have captured 84 individuals, and have equipped 67 with radio collars since 2011. Sixteen of these are presently active and sending data. The project is a cooperation between Grimsö Research Station, SLU, Sweden and Campus Evenstad, HiHM. We work with foxes in a gradient from the mixed agricultural/forest areas south of Stockholm, to the mixed forest/tundra landscape in central Norway. In this presentation, we will show some preliminary results on home range sizes, movement and dispersal distance, and mortality data. We will also propose characteristics of the population dynamics in the different parts of the productivity gradient, and compare estimates of survival with those from just before and during the outbreak of the sarcoptic mange. Leg length adaptation in Scandinavian red fox Jan Englund The habitats used by the red fox (Vulpes vulpes) in the five areas studied in Scandinavia show great variability in climate, prey offered and total productivity. In the far north, the winter is long, the ground is covered by thick snow and the productivity is low. In the south there is little or no snow and the productivity is high. The prey is mostly voles, but in the south rabbits and hare are in majority, demanding a different hunting technique. How these ecological factors have influenced the anatomy of the fox is discussed with special focus on the hind legs. The demography of the Icelandic arctic fox: long term fluctuations AND stability. Ester Rut Unnsteinsdottir According to hunting statistics and scientific studies, the arctic fox population expressed long term fluctuations during a period of half a century. The population had been large in 1950´s, but from then it declined and reached a minimum of 1.000 individuals in 1970´s and began to rise since then until 2008 when it exceeded 10.000 individuals. In an attempt to explain the fall and rise of the Icelandic arctic fox, these fluctuations have been associated with climate conditions and productivity of birds and other prey. No cycling rodents exist in Iceland and in most regions, foxes feed on birds of various types, eggs, carrion (sheep, reindeer, seals), invertebrates and berries. Predictable and steady food resources are reflected in low fertility as the arctic fox vixens give birth to litters of 4-6 cubs annually. Thus, in contrast to the situation in “lemming areas”, changes in fertility in accordance to changeable food conditions have not been observed and therefore do not regulate the population dynamics of the Icelandic arctic fox. Milder climate caused improved conditions for both predator and prey and is therefore likely to have affected survival rate and body condition. Thus, higher proportion of mature individuals taking part in breeding could play an important role. This could be explained by increased carrying capacity, either by higher density or extended distribution. It is therefore important to look into the data with both spatial and biological aspect. The regulation and limitation of the Icelandic arctic fox population is apparently based on a mixture of environmental and demographical events, regardless of heavy but steady hunting effort. 2 Conservation work in practise: Saving the Endangered Fennoscandian Alopex SEFALO Anders Angerbjörn More than a quarter of the world’s carnivores are threatened, often due to multiple and complex causes. Considerable research efforts are devoted to resolving the mechanisms behind these threats in order to provide a basis for relevant conservation actions. However, even when the underlying mechanisms are known, specific actions aimed at direct support for carnivores are difficult to implement and evaluate at efficient spatial and temporal scales. We report on a 30-year inventory of the critically endangered Fennoscandian arctic fox. These surveys showed that the population was close to extinction in 2000, with 40–60 adult animals left. However, the population subsequently showed a fourfold increase in size. We examined the effect of supplemental winter feeding and red fox control applied at different intensities in 10 regions. A path analysis indicated that 47% of the explained variation in population productivity could be attributed to lemming abundance, whereas winter feeding had a 29% effect and red fox control a 20% effect. 4. This confirms that arctic foxes are highly dependent on lemming population fluctuations but also shows that red foxes severely impact the viability of arctic foxes. This study also highlights the importance of implementing conservation actions on extensive spatial and temporal scales, with geographically dispersed actions to scientifically evaluate the effects. We note that population recovery was only seen in regions with a high intensity of management actions. This demonstrates that carnivore population declines may be reversed through extensive actions that target specific threats. The Fennoscandian arctic fox is still endangered, due to low population connectivity and expected climate impacts on the distribution and dynamics of lemmings and red foxes. Climate warming is expected to contribute to both more irregular lemming dynamics and red fox appearance in tundra areas; however, the effects of climate change can be mitigated through intensive management actions. Arctic fox social organization Bodil Elmhagen Canids display pronounced intraspecific variation in social organization, ranging from single breeding females to large and complex groups. We investigate social organization – intraspecific tolerance and group occurrence during breeding - in a socially flexible canid, the arctic fox (Vulpes lagopus). Comparing four different ecosystems, we found a significant relationship between resource conditions and formation of complex groups. Within Sweden, supplemental feeding increased group formation and alloparental behaviour among related females in "fox towns" could also contribute to group formation. We conclude that sufficient amounts of food is a prerequisite for group formation, but that improved predator defence further increases the benefits of living in larger groups. 3 Deep secrets revealed: A view into the phylogeography, historical demography, and speciation in the world's most basal canid, Urocyon spp Benjamin N. Sacks, M.J. Statham, N. Goddard, L. Serieys, and S. Riley We investigated cross-continental and regional phylogeography of Urocyon, the most basal extant lineage of canid in the world. In North America, many temperate forest-associated vertebrates split into eastern and western lineages due to Pleistocene aridification in the central portion of the continent, yet currently occur in continuous distributions due to secondary contact associated with Holocene expansions. Because of the antiquity of Urocyon in the fossil record on both ends of the North American continent, we investigated whether gray foxes Urocyon exhibited a deep, cryptic divergence associated with eastern and western refugia. Sequence divergence and coalescent simulations based on mitochondrial DNA sequences from 180 foxes indicated divergence between eastern and western foxes approximately 500,000 years ago, which is comparable to that between recognized sister species within the Canidae. Second, we investigated the regional phylogeography of gray (U. cinereoargenteus) and island (U. littoralis) foxes associated with the putative western refugium. Analysis of mtDNA and microsatellites revealed some unexpected findings, prompting new questions about the origins of island foxes relative to contemporary mainland gray foxes. Peninsulas and islands in a sea of red: phylogeography and population substructure of the European red fox. Mark J. Statham, C.J. Edwards, K. Norén, O’Mahoney, O’Reilly, C.D. Soulsbury, B. N. Sacks Historical climate change during the Quaternary Period caused both temperate and arctic adapted species to cycle through periods of range expansion and contraction. Such changes alternately facilitated and constrained gene flow, and resulted in both the evolution of local endemic lineages and in genetic homogenization. Previous investigations of red fox (Vulpes vulpes) population substructure within Europe have concluded that there is relatively limited population subdivision evident in mtDNA, while regional microsatellite based studies have found both minimal subdivision and local subdivision. Here we examined the continent-wide subdivision of 275 European red foxes examined at two mitochondrial gene regions and 21 nuclear microsatellite markers. We identified distinct populations on continental peninsulas and off-shore islands, and a central population derived from multiple sources. These findings along with population splitting time estimates shed light on the post-glacial colonization history of the species. Genomic variation and signatures of selection in European red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) Allan McDevitt, M.J. Statham, A. Ruiz-González, I. Ruczyńska, E. Randi, C. Pertoldi, J. Mullins, B.N.Sacks, R. Kowalczyk and J. Wójcik The advent of next-generation sequencing techniques has the potential to revolutionize our understanding of phylogeographic and adaptive processes in mammals at the continental scale. A total of 373 red foxes were genotyped in 24 populations using genotype-by-sequencing (GBS) to identify patterns of variation and signatures of selection in the genomes of red foxes across Europe. Almost 22,000 SNPs were retained after various quality control and filtering steps. Levels of genomic diversity were similar among populations but were generally lower in the most northerly populations in Scandinavia and the island populations. Fst-outlier analysis identified a large number of SNPs showing evidence of selection across a wide variety of genomic regions. Ongoing work will incorporate additional samples from Britain, the Mediterranean peninsulas and Russia in order to further elucidate phylogeographic and adaptive processes in this charismatic carnivore across Europe. 4 Genetic complexity of a simple behavioral pattern Anna V. Kukekova, J.L. Johnson, S.V. Temnykh, A.V. Kharlamova, A.V. Vladimirova, R.G. Gulevich and L.N. Trut Two strains of foxes (Vulpes vulpes) selected for specific behaviors demonstrate markedly different responses to humans. Tame strain foxes solicit attention and initiate tactile interaction with an experimenter while aggressive strain foxes avoid contact and demonstrate defensive aggression when approached. Fox behavior was tested in a four stage test which was designed to evaluate fox responses in situations with different level of interaction between the experimenter and tested animal. Fox behavior was deconstructed from video records into a set of traits and the main components of behavior at each test stage were reconstructed using Principal Component (PC) analysis. PC1 clearly differentiated between the tame and aggressive foxes at each test stage. An F2 population was produced by cross-breeding tame and aggressive strains and then breeding the F1 individuals to each other. In addition to displaying the behavioral patterns of the parental strains, F2 offspring also demonstrated novel patterns. These findings suggest that the behavioral patterns of parental tame and aggressive foxes although constant from stage to stage (consistently high or low PC1 values) contain subsets of behaviors that can re-assort in segregant populations to yield novel patterns of sequential behaviors. Genetic mapping of F2 pedigrees identified loci that are common to behavioral PCs extracted from different test stages and loci associated with behaviors specific to a particular stage, further supporting the underlying genetic complexity of tame and aggressive patterns. The arctic fox as model system to study trophic interactions Dominique Berteaux The arctic fox inhabits a simplified food web where predators, competitors, and prey are few. In this context, identifying its preferred, alternative, and incidental prey is possible, as well as quantifying most trophic interactions structuring its tundra ecosystem. Arctic foxes can also use the sea ice as foraging habitat in winter. The above opens many opportunities for hypothesis testing at the community, ecosystem, and meta-ecosystem scales. I use 20 years of work from Bylot Island (Nunavut, Canada) to illustrate how foxes can be used as model system to study trophic interactions. In particular, I show how an ecosystem-based monitoring combined with state-of-the-art field (stable isotopes, satellite tracking, movement-triggered cameras, etc.) and modeling techniques have allowed recent progress in ecology, using foxes as study model. I also try to identify some of the attributes of Vulpes that make them interesting models to study trophic interactions. Species interactions along a productivity gradient - mesopredator dynamics in different ecosystems Rasmus Erlandsson Species belonging to a certain trophic level have the potential to limit species on the level below them, and to be limited by species above them. Interactions between different animal species is however not limited to the basic ecology of the species involved, but could also be subject to modification by environmental factors; for example primary productivity. According to the Exploitation Ecosystem Hypothesis the number of trophic levels increases with primary productivity. Therefore, primary productivity, and hence the number of trophic levels, could be expected to affect animal interactions. Primary productivity is related to the amount of available sunlight but could be limited by temperature or availability of water. As sunlight and growth season varies over the world it is possible to compare different ecosystems along a productivity gradient and investigate differences in species interactions. The /Vulpes/ genus (foxes) has a large distribution range representing species of different body sizes, ecological niches and distribution. Foxes are common 5 both as top predators and mesopredators depending on ecological setting and different fox species could hence be a suitable study group when comparing population dynamics and interactions in different habitats. In this study I go through available literature on population dynamics and interspecific interactions of fox species in a wide range of ecosystems over the world, and relate them to primary productivity. The red fox (Vulpes vulpes) in a trophic interaction perspective Marianne Pasanen Mortensen The red fox seem to hold an intermediate position in the food web where they interact with prey as well as with larger predators - they function as mesopredators. This implies that the red fox can be limited top-down by predators at the top of the food chain, apex predators, and bottom-up by environmental conditions affecting food access. The red fox is thus an ideal study species for trophic interactions, and as the red fox has a wide distribution range it is also ideal to study trophic processes that occur on large scales. This presentation will describe relationships between the red fox, apex predators, and drivers related to prey abundance - primary productivity, climate, land use and human density – at a continental scale, assessed in two studies of the fox population in Europe and northern Eurasia. According to the mesopredator release hypothesis extinction of apex predators can result in an increase of mesopredators, as top-down limitation is lost. The studies show that the Eurasian lynx, together with winter severity, is important in limiting red fox abundance, and it supports the mesopredator release hypothesis as red fox abundance is higher where lynx has been eradicated than where lynx is still present. In the absence of lynx, red fox abundance is boosted by anthropogenic land use, and red fox abundance is highest when croplands constitute 30% of the landscape, where after social regulation seems to limit foxes. Using the red fox as a model species of trophic interactions at a continental scale, we conclude that apex predators can be important in structuring ecosystems by limiting mesopredators, and that there are two ecosystem states in Eurasia – one in north where lynx function as apex predator and the red fox as mesopredator, and one in south-west where lynx is eradicated and the red fox has assumed the role of an apex predator. Focused sampling of red fox (Vulpes vulpes) feces for identification of Echinococcus multilocularis in Sweden Andrea L. Miller, G.E. Olsson, S. Sollenberg, M. Skarin, H. Wahlström and J. Höglund Following the first identification of Echinococcus multilocularis in a red fox (Vulpes vulpes) shot in December 2010 in Sweden, a research project began to identify and further investigate the role of the rodent intermediate host in the parasite’s lifecycle. As part of this research, fox feces are collected to assess the level of environmental contamination of parasite eggs in rodent habitats. Seasonal sampling has occurred in four areas chosen according to their E. multilocularis status at the beginning of the study in 2013 [Uddevalla (U) and Katrineholm (K)-known parasite status; Växjö (V) and Gnesta/Nyköping (G)-unknown parasite status]. Although fecal samples are collected throughout each ~20x20 km area, special effort is put in habitats, such as fields, where rodent trapping occurs. These focused collection methods result in intense sampling [e.g 28 feces collected in one field (~25 ha), winter 2014]. Parasite eggs are isolated from feces by sieving methods and tested with PCR and sequencing for species identification. To date, 612 fecal samples have been collected. Although collection and analysis are still ongoing, preliminary results show positive fecal samples in all areas [U 5/193 (2.6%); K 3/110 (2.7%); V 2/58 (3.4%); G 6/41 (14.6%)]. These results indicate “hot spots” of E. multilocularis where the prevalence in foxes may be higher than the national prevalence of 0.1% estimated from two recent nation-wide screenings. This collection method has also identified two additional positive areas (V and G) not detected in the initial screening. We suggest that risk-based surveillance (i.e. focused sampling in presumed high risk habitats) is an effective strategy to identify 6 E. multilocularis in the environment. Particularly for countries declared E. multilocularis free, these findings are an important consideration for the allocation of surveillance resources. THIS ABSTRACT ALSO ACCEPTED FOR PRESENTATION AT THE NORDIC WILDLIFE DISEASE ASSOCIATION MEETING JUNE 10-12, 2015 Interference in the tundra predator guild studied using local ecological knowledge D. Ehrich, M. Strømeng and Siw T. Killengreen The decline or recolonization of apex predators such as wolves and lynx often driven by management decisions, and the expansion of smaller generalist predators such as red foxes can have important ecosystem impacts. The mesopredator release hypothesis proposes that apex predators control medium sized predator populations through competition and/or intraguild predation. The decline of apex predators leads thus to an increase in mesopredators, possibly with a negative impact on prey populations. Information about the abundance of mammalian tundra predators (wolf, lynx, wolverine, red fox and arctic fox) was collected from local active outdoors people during semistructured interviews in 14 low arctic or sub-arctic settlements in western Eurasia. Results: The perceived abundance of red fox decreased with higher wolf abundance, but the negative effect of wolves decreased in more Arctic and therefore less productive ecosystems. The perceived abundance of arctic fox increased towards the Arctic and in areas with colder winters. Red fox abundance did only have a major effect on arctic fox abundance in the western part of the study area, possibly because of interference between wolves and red foxes in eastern areas. Our results support the mesopredator release hypothesis regarding the expansion of red foxes in subarctic areas and indicate that top down control by apex predators is weaker in less productive and more Arctic ecosystems. Significance: We showed that local ecological knowledge is a valuable source of information about large-scale processes which are difficult to study through direct biological investigations. Knowledge about fox population migration needed to predict the spread of Echinococcus multilocularis Helene Wahlström Echinococcus multilocularis (Em) is an emerging parasitic disease with a life cycle that involves canids, usually foxes, as the definitive host and rodents as intermediate hosts. Humans can act as an accidental intermediate host and develop a serious, potentially fatal disease if untreated. The endemic area of this parasite in Europe is considered to be expanding and there is evidence that both the fox population and the prevalence of Em has increased in many areas. Over the past two decades the parasite has spread from central Europe to Northern, Eastern and Western Europe. A few countries are documented to be free from Em: UK, Ireland, Malta, Norway and Finland. To prevent introduction of Em, these countries are allowed to require that dogs imported are dewormed prior to entry. To maintain these import requirements, the countries are required to document, on an annual basis that the prevalence of Em in foxes is below 1% with 95% confidence. These requirements are presently being revised and it has been discussed if freedom from Em should be documented at a lower level, for example 0.1%, the current prevalence of Em in Sweden. This would require that approximately 3000 fox scats are analysed annually, which would be very expensive. However, by using a baysian methodology, where results from surveillance done in previous years are taken into account, the required sample size could be decreased. However, this methodology requires an estimate of the probability of introduction of the parasite into the country. Although data is scarce, the risk of introduction by dogs may be estimated. However, for Norway and Finland the highest probability of introduction would be by foxes or racoon dogs. This requires estimates of the density of foxes/racoon dogs, the prevalence of Em in foxes/racoon dogs and knowledge of migration 7 patterns between Norway/Finland and adjacent Em-endemic countries. If this is possible is a question that needs to be answered. The ECOFUNC project Nina E. Eide Understanding ecosystem functionality, expansion and retreat of species in the Scandinavian mountain tundra under multiple drivers of change. Using Scandinavian foxes as indicators of change. The Fennoscandian mountain range comprises a series of separate arctic and alpine tundra areas. This natural fragmentation is expected to be magnified following climate mediated forest advance with associated invasion of boreal species. Cumulative effects of climate change, land use changes and management practices will likely have large impacts on both structure and function of the mountain tundra ecosystem; strongly affect biodiversity and the viability of species in these habitats, and the mountain tundra ecosystem's ability to deliver ecosystem services. The proposed project has a tri-trophic ecosystem approach, testing hypotheses about how climate change, land use, and management practices drive species expansion and retreat in the mountain tundra ecosystem. We use forest advancement, red fox invasion and arctic fox retreat as our model system and as indicators of ecosystem change. The project will deliver hard data on the relationship between environmental change and functional and structural responses of individuals, populations, and communities of the mountain tundra ecosystem. We will apply an interdisciplinary approach, including observational and experimental methods at large spatial scales, GIS and spatial modelling, landscape genomics, and population viability analyses, providing the basis for a predictive model for the future structure of the mountain tundra ecosystem in Fennoscandia. The project is highly relevant to conservation management. We aim to develop tools that could forecast cumulative impacts from different drivers, providing potential management options showing the outcome of different solutions. Indeed, such tools would be useful for planning and optimizing conservation programs, restoration of landscapes, targeting management action, or controlling the spread of diseases. Prey preferences of red foxes in their native and introduced ranges Matt Hayward Be aware - this talk is a call for research collaboration rather than a description of my research results. One of my research areas involves meta-analyses of the prey preferences of predators by comparing what they eat with what prey is available. Myself and colleagues have conducted such studies on Africa and Asia’s large carnivore guilds, and are now moving on to large carnivores in the Americas. We have also started looking at smaller carnivores to see if they follow the same principles of prey selection: predators invariably preferentially kill a limited number of prey species that usually fall within a specific preferred prey weight range. I’d like to extend this work to foxes, and particularly compare the prey preferences of red foxes Vulpes vulpes in their native and introduced ranges. Hence, I am seeking collaborators who have data on red fox diet and the abundance (actual or relative) of the prey community at the same sites from throughout the distribution of the species. 8 Workshop participants (as of August 12) Angerbjörn Berteaux Eide Elmhagen Englund Ferreras de Andres Harrison Hayward Killengreen Kowalczyk Kukekova McDevitt Miller Norén Pasanen-Mortensen Rod-Eriksen Sacks Samelius Sangin Statham Thierry Ulvund Roaldsnes Unnsteinsdottie Wahlström Wallén Willebrand Wójcik Anders Dominique Nina E. Bodil Jan Pablo Stephen Matt Siw T. Rafal Anna Allan Andrea Karin Marianne Lars Benjamin N. Gustaf Kim Mark J. Anne-Mathilde Kristine Ester Rut Helene Johan Thomas Jan M. 9