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Hunting and mountain sheep: Do current harvest practices affect horn growth?

机译:狩猎和野羊:目前的收割方法会影响牛角的生长吗?

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The influence of human harvest on evolution of secondary sexual characteristics has implications for sustainable management of wildlife populations. The phenotypic consequences of selectively removing males with large horns or antlers from ungulate populations have been a topic of heightened concern in recent years. Harvest can affect size of horn‐like structures in two ways: (a) shifting age structure toward younger age classes, which can reduce the mean size of horn‐like structures, or (b) selecting against genes that produce large, fast‐growing males. We evaluated effects of age, climatic and forage conditions, and metrics of harvest on horn size and growth of mountain sheep ( Ovis canadensis ssp.) in 72 hunt areas across North America from 1981 to 2016. In 50% of hunt areas, changes in mean horn size during the study period were related to changes in age structure of harvested sheep. Environmental conditions explained directional changes in horn growth in 28% of hunt areas, 7% of which did not exhibit change before accounting for effects of the environment. After accounting for age and environment, horn size of mountain sheep was stable or increasing in the majority (~78%) of hunt areas. Age‐specific horn size declined in 44% of hunt areas where harvest was regulated solely by morphological criteria, which supports the notion that harvest practices that are simultaneously selective and intensive might lead to changes in horn growth. Nevertheless, phenotypic consequences are not a foregone conclusion in the face of selective harvest; over half of the hunt areas with highly selective and intensive harvest did not exhibit age‐specific declines in horn size. Our results demonstrate that while harvest regimes are an important consideration, horn growth of harvested male mountain sheep has remained largely stable, indicating that changes in horn growth patterns are an unlikely consequence of harvest across most of North America.
机译:人类收获对次生性特征进化的影响对野生动植物种群的可持续管理具有影响。近年来,从有蹄类动物种群中选择性去除具有大角或鹿角的雄性的表型后果已成为人们日益关注的话题。收获可以通过两种方式影响角状结构的大小:(a)将年龄结构转移到较年轻的年龄段,这可以减少角状结构的平均大小,或者(b)选择产生大量快速生长的基因男性。我们评估了年龄,气候和饲草条件以及收获指标对1981年至2016年北美72个狩猎区的山羊(Ovis canadensis ssp。)角大小和生长的影响。在50%的狩猎区中,研究期间的平均牛角大小与收获绵羊的年龄结构变化有关。环境条件解释了在28%的狩猎区域中喇叭生长的方向变化,其中有7%在考虑环境影响之前没有表现出变化。在考虑了年龄和环境之后,大多数狩猎地区(约78%)的山绵羊的牛角大小稳定或增加。在仅通过形态学标准来控制收割的狩猎地区,有特定年龄的牛角大小有所下降,这支持了这样一种观念,即同时进行选择性和集约化的收割方法可能会导致牛角生长发生变化。然而,面对选择性收获,表型后果还不是定局。超过一半的具有高度选择性和高强度收获的狩猎区没有出现因年龄而异的喇叭尺寸下降。我们的结果表明,虽然收获制度是一个重要的考虑因素,但收获的雄性山绵羊的牛角生长基本保持稳定,这表明在北美大部分地区,牛角生长方式的变化不太可能是收获的结果。

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