Open Access
Population responses of common ravens to reintroduced gray wolves
Author(s) -
Walker Lauren E.,
Marzluff John M.,
Metz Matthew C.,
Wirsing Aaron J.,
Moskal L. Monika,
Stahler Daniel R.,
Smith Douglas W.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
ecology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.17
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 2045-7758
DOI - 10.1002/ece3.4583
Subject(s) - carrion , ecology , population , geography , abundance (ecology) , predation , corvidae , range (aeronautics) , habitat , national park , foraging , biology , demography , materials science , sociology , composite material
Abstract Top predators have cascading effects throughout the food web, but their impacts on scavenger abundance are largely unknown. Gray wolves ( Canis lupus ) provide carrion to a suite of scavenger species, including the common raven ( Corvus corax ). Ravens are wide‐ranging and intelligent omnivores that commonly take advantage of anthropogenic food resources. In areas where they overlap with wolves, however, ravens are numerous and ubiquitous scavengers of wolf‐acquired carrion. We aimed to determine whether subsidies provided through wolves are a limiting factor for raven populations in general and how the wolf reintroduction to Yellowstone National Park in 1995–1997 affected raven population abundance and distribution on the Yellowstone's Northern Range specifically. We counted ravens throughout Yellowstone's Northern Range in March from 2009 to 2017 in both human‐use areas and wolf habitat. We then used statistics related to the local wolf population and the winter weather conditions to model raven abundance during our study period and predict raven abundance on the Northern Range both before and after the wolf reintroduction. In relatively severe winters with greater snowpack, raven abundance increased in areas of human use and decreased in wolf habitat. When wolves were able to acquire more carrion, however, ravens increased in wolf habitat and decreased in areas with anthropogenic resources. Raven populations prior to the wolf reintroduction were likely more variable and heavily dependent on ungulate winter‐kill and hunter‐provided carcasses. The wolf recovery in Yellowstone helped stabilize raven populations by providing a regular food supply, regardless of winter severity. This stabilization has important implications for effective land management as wolves recolonize the west and global climate patterns change.