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The Gordian knot of mountain lion predation and bighorn sheep
Author(s) -
Rominger Eric M.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the journal of wildlife management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1937-2817
pISSN - 0022-541X
DOI - 10.1002/jwmg.21396
Subject(s) - ovis canadensis , ursus , predation , odocoileus , canis , ungulate , ecology , bovidae , geography , biology , habitat , population , demography , sociology
ABSTRACT The objective of this review is to generate a synthesis of research conducted on predation of bighorn sheep ( Ovis canadensis ) and to suggest directions for future research relative to current knowledge gaps and a novel hypothesis. This review is primarily based on literature from the last 60 years on desert bighorn sheep ( O. c. nelsoni ), Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep ( O. c. canadensis ), and mountain lion ( Puma concolor ) predation. Although, many predators kill bighorn sheep, only mountain lions are currently considered to be the primary proximate cause of mortality for many bighorn sheep populations. The ultimate cause of this phenomenon has vexed wildlife managers for >40 years. There are 3 primary reasons for increased predation on bighorn sheep by mountain lions. First, there is an increased presence of mountain lions in habitats where they were historically absent or rare because of the expansion of mule deer ( Odocoileus hemionus ) following the extensive conversion of fire‐maintained grasslands to shrublands in the late‐1800s. Second, is the extirpation of the 2 dominant apex carnivores (wolves [ Canis lupus ] and grizzly bears [ Ursus arctos ]) during this same time period and a hypothesized numerical response of mountain lions to those extirpations. Finally, the response of mountain lions to the cessation of >70 years of intensive predator control has often resulted in unsustainable mountain lion‐bighorn sheep ratios, especially for desert bighorn sheep. Additionally, the effect of mountain lion predation is exacerbated by declines in bighorn sheep that do not result in declines in mountain lions because of their ability to prey switch to mule deer, elk ( Cervus canadensis ), or domestic cattle; kleptoparasitism of mountain lions kills, by ursids and canids, resulting in higher kill rates for mountain lions; and a possible ecological trap where adaptations derived over evolutionary time are no longer adaptive because of human‐induced changes in the sympatric apex predator guild. Control of mountain lions, when mountain lion‐ungulate ratios are high, might be required to protect small or endangered bighorn sheep populations, and to produce bighorn sheep for restoration efforts. © 2017 The Wildlife Society.

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