首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences >Antlers on the Arctic Refuge: capturing multi-generational patterns of calving ground use from bones on the landscape
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Antlers on the Arctic Refuge: capturing multi-generational patterns of calving ground use from bones on the landscape

机译:北极避难所上的鹿角:从景观的骨骼上捕获多代的产犊方式

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摘要

Bone accumulations faithfully record historical ecological data on animal communities, and owing to millennial-scale bone survival on high-latitude landscapes, have exceptional potential for extending records on arctic ecosystems. For the Porcupine Caribou Herd, maintaining access to calving grounds on the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR, Alaska) is a central management concern. However, variability in calving ground geography over the 30+ years of monitoring suggests establishing the impacts of climate change and potential petroleum development on future calving success could benefit from extended temporal perspectives. Using accumulations of female antlers (shed within days of calving) and neonatal skeletons, we test if caribou calving grounds develop measureable and characteristic bone accumulations and if skeletal data may be helpful in establishing a fuller, historically integrated understanding of landscape and habitat needs. Bone surveys of an important ANWR calving area reveal abundant shed antlers (reaching 103 km–2) and high proportional abundance of newborn skeletal individuals (up to 60% neonate). Openly vegetated riparian terraces, which compose less than 10 per cent of ANWR calving grounds, yield significantly higher antler concentrations than more abundant habitats traditionally viewed as primary calving terrain. Differences between habitats appear robust to potential differences in bone visibility. The distribution of antler weathering stages mirrors known multi-decadal calving histories and highlights portions of the antler accumulation that probably significantly extends records of calving activity. Death assemblages offer historically integrated ecological data valuable for the management and conservation of faunas across polar latitudes.
机译:骨骼堆积物忠实地记录了动物群落的历史生态数据,并且由于在高纬度地区的千年规模的骨骼生存,在扩展北极生态系统的记录方面具有巨大的潜力。对于豪猪驯鹿群来说,保持进入北极国家野生动物保护区(阿拉斯加ANWR)的产犊场的通道一直是管理的中心问题。但是,在30多年的监测中,产犊地貌的变化性表明,建立气候变化的影响和潜在的石油开发对未来产犊成功的影响,可以从扩展的时间角度受益。利用雌性鹿角(在产犊后几天内脱落)和新生儿骨骼的积累,我们测试了驯鹿产卵场是否形成了可测量的和特征性的骨积累,并且骨骼数据是否有助于建立对景观和栖息地需求的更全面的,历史综合的理解。对重要的ANWR产犊区域进行的骨骼调查显示,鹿角的鹿角丰富(达到10 3 kmm –2 ),并且新生骨骼个体的比例丰度很高(高达60%的新生儿)。裸露的河岸阶地,占ANWR产犊场的不到10%,比传统上被视为主要产犊地形的更丰富的栖息地产生更高的鹿角浓度。生境之间的差异似乎对骨骼可见性的潜在差异具有鲁棒性。鹿角风化阶段的分布反映了已知的十年年代产犊历史,并突出了鹿角堆积的一部分,这可能会大大扩展产犊活动的记录。死亡组合提供了历史上完整的生态数据,对于管理和保护极地纬度地区的动物非常有价值。

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