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Potential paths for male‐mediated gene flow to and from an isolated grizzly bear population
Author(s) -
Peck Christopher P.,
Manen Frank T.,
Costello Cecily M.,
Haroldson Mark A.,
Landenburger Lisa A.,
Roberts Lori L.,
Bjornlie Daniel D.,
Mace Richard D.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
ecosphere
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.255
H-Index - 57
ISSN - 2150-8925
DOI - 10.1002/ecs2.1969
Subject(s) - population , range (aeronautics) , ecology , grizzly bears , geography , habitat , gene flow , landscape connectivity , biological dispersal , home range , biology , demography , genetic variation , materials science , sociology , composite material , ursus
For several decades, grizzly bear populations in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem ( GYE ) and the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem ( NCDE ) have increased in numbers and range extent. The GYE population remains isolated and although effective population size has increased since the early 1980s, genetic connectivity between these populations remains a long‐term management goal. With only ~110 km distance separating current estimates of occupied range for these populations, the potential for gene flow is likely greater now than it has been for many decades. We sought to delineate potential paths that would provide the opportunity for male‐mediated gene flow between the two populations. We first developed step‐selection functions to generate conductance layers using ecological, physical, and anthropogenic landscape features associated with non‐stationary GPS locations of 124 male grizzly bears (199 bear‐years). We then used a randomized shortest path ( RSP ) algorithm to estimate the average number of net passages for all grid cells in the study region, when moving from an origin to a destination node. Given habitat characteristics that were the basis for the conductance layer, movements follow certain grid cell sequences more than others and the resulting RSP values thus provide a measure of movement potential. Repeating this process for 100 pairs of random origin and destination nodes, we identified paths for three levels of random deviation (θ) from the least‐cost path. We observed broad‐scale concordance between model predictions for paths originating in the NCDE and those originating in the GYE for all three levels of movement exploration. Model predictions indicated that male grizzly bear movement between the ecosystems could involve a variety of routes, and verified observations of grizzly bears outside occupied range supported this finding. Where landscape features concentrated paths into corridors (e.g., because of anthropogenic influence), they typically followed neighboring mountain ranges, of which several could serve as pivotal stepping stones. The RSP layers provide detailed, spatially explicit information for land managers and organizations working with land owners to identify and prioritize conservation measures that maintain or enhance the integrity of potential areas conducive to male grizzly bear dispersal.

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