Water developments and canids in two North American deserts: a test of the indirect effect of water hypothesis.

Anthropogenic modifications to landscapes intended to benefit wildlife may negatively influence wildlife communities. Anthropogenic provisioning of free water (water developments) to enhance abundance and distribution of wildlife is a common management practice in arid regions where water is limitin...

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Main Authors: Lucas K Hall, Randy T Larsen, Robert N Knight, Kevin D Bunnell, Brock R McMillan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3699512?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e3a9aff4b2424ad192d4e591f20eb2522020-11-25T01:26:18ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0187e6780010.1371/journal.pone.0067800Water developments and canids in two North American deserts: a test of the indirect effect of water hypothesis.Lucas K HallRandy T LarsenRobert N KnightKevin D BunnellBrock R McMillanAnthropogenic modifications to landscapes intended to benefit wildlife may negatively influence wildlife communities. Anthropogenic provisioning of free water (water developments) to enhance abundance and distribution of wildlife is a common management practice in arid regions where water is limiting. Despite the long-term and widespread use of water developments, little is known about how they influence native species. Water developments may negatively influence arid-adapted species (e.g., kit fox, Vulpes macrotis) by enabling water-dependent competitors (e.g., coyote, Canis latrans) to expand distribution in arid landscapes (i.e., indirect effect of water hypothesis). We tested the two predictions of the indirect effect of water hypothesis (i.e., coyotes will visit areas with free water more frequently and kit foxes will spatially and temporally avoid coyotes) and evaluated relative use of free water by canids in the Great Basin and Mojave Deserts from 2010 to 2012. We established scent stations in areas with (wet) and without (dry) free water and monitored visitation by canids to these sites and visitation to water sources using infrared-triggered cameras. There was no difference in the proportions of visits to scent stations in wet or dry areas by coyotes or kit foxes at either study area. We did not detect spatial (no negative correlation between visits to scent stations) or temporal (no difference between times when stations were visited) segregation between coyotes and kit foxes. Visitation to water sources was not different for coyotes between study areas, but kit foxes visited water sources more in Mojave than Great Basin. Our results did not support the indirect effect of water hypothesis in the Great Basin or Mojave Deserts for these two canids.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3699512?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lucas K Hall
Randy T Larsen
Robert N Knight
Kevin D Bunnell
Brock R McMillan
spellingShingle Lucas K Hall
Randy T Larsen
Robert N Knight
Kevin D Bunnell
Brock R McMillan
Water developments and canids in two North American deserts: a test of the indirect effect of water hypothesis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Lucas K Hall
Randy T Larsen
Robert N Knight
Kevin D Bunnell
Brock R McMillan
author_sort Lucas K Hall
title Water developments and canids in two North American deserts: a test of the indirect effect of water hypothesis.
title_short Water developments and canids in two North American deserts: a test of the indirect effect of water hypothesis.
title_full Water developments and canids in two North American deserts: a test of the indirect effect of water hypothesis.
title_fullStr Water developments and canids in two North American deserts: a test of the indirect effect of water hypothesis.
title_full_unstemmed Water developments and canids in two North American deserts: a test of the indirect effect of water hypothesis.
title_sort water developments and canids in two north american deserts: a test of the indirect effect of water hypothesis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Anthropogenic modifications to landscapes intended to benefit wildlife may negatively influence wildlife communities. Anthropogenic provisioning of free water (water developments) to enhance abundance and distribution of wildlife is a common management practice in arid regions where water is limiting. Despite the long-term and widespread use of water developments, little is known about how they influence native species. Water developments may negatively influence arid-adapted species (e.g., kit fox, Vulpes macrotis) by enabling water-dependent competitors (e.g., coyote, Canis latrans) to expand distribution in arid landscapes (i.e., indirect effect of water hypothesis). We tested the two predictions of the indirect effect of water hypothesis (i.e., coyotes will visit areas with free water more frequently and kit foxes will spatially and temporally avoid coyotes) and evaluated relative use of free water by canids in the Great Basin and Mojave Deserts from 2010 to 2012. We established scent stations in areas with (wet) and without (dry) free water and monitored visitation by canids to these sites and visitation to water sources using infrared-triggered cameras. There was no difference in the proportions of visits to scent stations in wet or dry areas by coyotes or kit foxes at either study area. We did not detect spatial (no negative correlation between visits to scent stations) or temporal (no difference between times when stations were visited) segregation between coyotes and kit foxes. Visitation to water sources was not different for coyotes between study areas, but kit foxes visited water sources more in Mojave than Great Basin. Our results did not support the indirect effect of water hypothesis in the Great Basin or Mojave Deserts for these two canids.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3699512?pdf=render
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