Land management strategies for the long-term persistence of boreal woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan

We investigated landscape changes and their potential effects on woodland caribou-boreal ecotype (Rangifer tarandus caribou) within a portion of the Smoothstone-Wapaweka Woodland Caribou Management Unit (SW-WCMU). The SW-WCMU is one of eight areas delineated by the Province of Saskatchewan for poten...

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Main Authors: A. Alan Arsenault, Micheline Manseau
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Septentrio Academic Publishing 2011-09-01
Series:Rangifer
Subjects:
Online Access:https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/1988
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spelling doaj-7d6365594a3e41a6919fe8ba9da8e5de2020-11-25T01:12:12ZengSeptentrio Academic PublishingRangifer1890-67292011-09-0131210.7557/2.31.2.19881856Land management strategies for the long-term persistence of boreal woodland caribou in central SaskatchewanA. Alan ArsenaultMicheline ManseauWe investigated landscape changes and their potential effects on woodland caribou-boreal ecotype (Rangifer tarandus caribou) within a portion of the Smoothstone-Wapaweka Woodland Caribou Management Unit (SW-WCMU). The SW-WCMU is one of eight areas delineated by the Province of Saskatchewan for potential recovery planning efforts for boreal caribou, and is one of four management units located on the Boreal Plain Ecozone. The Prince Albert Greater Ecosystem (PAGE) study area was selected within the SW-WCMU for intensive study from 2004 - 2008. Studies focused on quantifying a suite of landscape and population parameters. This paper presents a summary of study results to date and recommends land management strategies intended to contribute to the long-term viability of boreal caribou in the central boreal plain ecoregion of Saskatchewan. The PAGE study area has undergone structural changes from an area that historically presented a lesser amount but well connected mature coniferous forest, to a currently larger amount of mature coniferous stands fragmented by a highly developed network of roads and trails. Movement data pointed to highly clustered use of the landscape by small groups of caribou and smaller home ranges when compared to 15 years ago. Calving sites were located within each individual home range in treed peatland and distant from hardwood/mixedwood forest stands, roads and trails access. Adult annual survival rates were low, averaging 73% over the course of the study. In order to ensure a self-sustaining population level, study results clearly point to the need for landscape restoration to reduce the level of anthropogenic disturbances in some key parts of the study area. Key strategies include retention of mature softwood forest interior proximate to local areas of caribou activity, protection of calving habitat, improving structural connectivity, planning disturbances (forest harvesting, fire salvage, resource exploration, access development) in ways to minimize the anthropogenic footprint, and recovery action planning integrated with other land-use planning initiatives.https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/1988boreal woodland caribouecological integrityhabitat connectivityhabitat selectionland management strategiesnon-invasive genetic sampling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Alan Arsenault
Micheline Manseau
spellingShingle A. Alan Arsenault
Micheline Manseau
Land management strategies for the long-term persistence of boreal woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan
Rangifer
boreal woodland caribou
ecological integrity
habitat connectivity
habitat selection
land management strategies
non-invasive genetic sampling
author_facet A. Alan Arsenault
Micheline Manseau
author_sort A. Alan Arsenault
title Land management strategies for the long-term persistence of boreal woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan
title_short Land management strategies for the long-term persistence of boreal woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan
title_full Land management strategies for the long-term persistence of boreal woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan
title_fullStr Land management strategies for the long-term persistence of boreal woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan
title_full_unstemmed Land management strategies for the long-term persistence of boreal woodland caribou in central Saskatchewan
title_sort land management strategies for the long-term persistence of boreal woodland caribou in central saskatchewan
publisher Septentrio Academic Publishing
series Rangifer
issn 1890-6729
publishDate 2011-09-01
description We investigated landscape changes and their potential effects on woodland caribou-boreal ecotype (Rangifer tarandus caribou) within a portion of the Smoothstone-Wapaweka Woodland Caribou Management Unit (SW-WCMU). The SW-WCMU is one of eight areas delineated by the Province of Saskatchewan for potential recovery planning efforts for boreal caribou, and is one of four management units located on the Boreal Plain Ecozone. The Prince Albert Greater Ecosystem (PAGE) study area was selected within the SW-WCMU for intensive study from 2004 - 2008. Studies focused on quantifying a suite of landscape and population parameters. This paper presents a summary of study results to date and recommends land management strategies intended to contribute to the long-term viability of boreal caribou in the central boreal plain ecoregion of Saskatchewan. The PAGE study area has undergone structural changes from an area that historically presented a lesser amount but well connected mature coniferous forest, to a currently larger amount of mature coniferous stands fragmented by a highly developed network of roads and trails. Movement data pointed to highly clustered use of the landscape by small groups of caribou and smaller home ranges when compared to 15 years ago. Calving sites were located within each individual home range in treed peatland and distant from hardwood/mixedwood forest stands, roads and trails access. Adult annual survival rates were low, averaging 73% over the course of the study. In order to ensure a self-sustaining population level, study results clearly point to the need for landscape restoration to reduce the level of anthropogenic disturbances in some key parts of the study area. Key strategies include retention of mature softwood forest interior proximate to local areas of caribou activity, protection of calving habitat, improving structural connectivity, planning disturbances (forest harvesting, fire salvage, resource exploration, access development) in ways to minimize the anthropogenic footprint, and recovery action planning integrated with other land-use planning initiatives.
topic boreal woodland caribou
ecological integrity
habitat connectivity
habitat selection
land management strategies
non-invasive genetic sampling
url https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/1988
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