Drivers of population growth variations for two Mediterranean sympatric Deer
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/98964Metadatos
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The Ecological Society of Japan
Materia
Deer population dynamics Densitydependence detection Climatic constraints Management culls Mediterranean ecosystems conservation
Fecha
2017Referencia bibliográfica
López-Montoya, A. J., Moro, J., & Azorit, C. (2017). Drivers of population growth variations for two Mediterranean sympatric Deer. Ecological Research, 32, 703-712.
Patrocinador
Departamento de Biología Animal, Biología Vegetal y Ecología de la Universidad de JaénResumen
Detecting density-dependence (DD) in population
fluctuations is essential for population control,
herd management and harvest programs. However, little
information has been obtained for deer in Mediterranean
ecosystems. We assess the effects of density, climate
and harvesting on population growth fluctuations
of two sympatric red (Cervus elaphus hispanicus) and
fallow deer (Dama dama), in two hunting reserves located
in a protected area of south-east Spain. We use
time series analysis of 16 consecutive years of abundance
estimates and hunting extractions. We hypothesized a
negative influence of density, deer hunting and drought
on population growth rates. Through an integrative
Bayesian state-space modeling making possible a unified
population analysis we have been able to not only estimate
the effects of DD, climate and harvest extractions
but also to evaluate their relative impacts on deer population
in each location. We found deer populations
exhibiting a very strong potential to grow from low
density. We detected DD having a stronger effect than
hunting and climatic factors, especially for overabundant
deer populations close to their carrying capacity.
Density-dependent mechanisms compensate harvest
extractions, reducing hunting effectiveness. Severe summer
drought conditions had negative effects on growth
rates and eventually led to delayed autumn deer deaths.
The weather effect is more important the more abundant
the deer are. In a climate change context, in Mediterranean
environments the importance of weather factors
could become much greater if both ungulates’ densities and aridity increase. Population size control here could
modulate the negative effects of climatic constraints on
deer and ecosystems conservation.