2020
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0230521
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The level of habitat patchiness influences movement strategy of moose in Eastern Poland

Abstract: Spatio-temporal variation in resource availability leads to a variety of animal movement strategies. In the case of ungulates, temporally unpredictable landscapes are associated with nomadism, while high predictability in the resource distribution favours migratory or sedentary behaviours depending on the spatial and temporal scale of landscape dynamics. As most of the surveys on moose (Alces alces) movement behaviours in Europe have been conducted on Scandinavian populations, little is known about the movemen… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Additionally, the majority of individuals were infected with several parasite species, and males had significantly higher parasite species richness than females. High population density exceeding 1.5 ind/km 2 ( Raczyński and Ratkiewicz, 2011 ) and a significant percentage of migratory individuals within the study area ( Borowik et al, 2020 ) may promote the spread of parasitic infections and high level of parasitism in the population from the Biebrza valley. Management of this genetically distinct ( Świsłocka et al, 2008 ; Świsłocka et al, 2020 ) and non-harvested for 20 years moose population should include health monitoring programs with investigations of parasite status.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Additionally, the majority of individuals were infected with several parasite species, and males had significantly higher parasite species richness than females. High population density exceeding 1.5 ind/km 2 ( Raczyński and Ratkiewicz, 2011 ) and a significant percentage of migratory individuals within the study area ( Borowik et al, 2020 ) may promote the spread of parasitic infections and high level of parasitism in the population from the Biebrza valley. Management of this genetically distinct ( Świsłocka et al, 2008 ; Świsłocka et al, 2020 ) and non-harvested for 20 years moose population should include health monitoring programs with investigations of parasite status.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Seventy two fresh samples of moose faeces were collected in winter (from November 2012 to March 2013) in the Biebrza River valley (22 °35′E, 53 °26′N), North-Eastern Poland. The majority of samples were collected from moose individuals localized by GPS-tracking (25 collared individuals; for details see Borowik et al, 2020 ). Some samples were also collected from occasionally encountered individuals during field visits.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, we evaluated differences in the distances of the moose records from key land cover categories: artificial surfaces as potential barrier and threat, broad-leaved forest as a preferred habitat for foraging and hiding, natural grassland and shrubs for foraging, wetlands, and waterbodies as habitats for hiding and avoiding heat stress (Borowik et al, 2018(Borowik et al, , 2020Beest et al, 2012;Courtois et al, 2002;Melin et al, 2016;Romportl et al, 2017;Tomek, 1977) for each time period. We tested data for normality and used ANOVA and Kruskal-Wallis test depending on normality of the data in R software (R Core Team, 2019).…”
Section: Environmental Data and Habitat Preferencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, in this study, to obtain an accurate picture of the history and status of the moose population, we collected all available occurrence data from the region to (a) evaluate changes in moose distribution in the study area; (b) identify the main causes of mortality; and (c) analyze habitat selection to model the extent of suitable habitat. We expected that landscapes with water bodies, wetlands, and a heterogeneous mosaic of shrubs, meadows, and forests provide suitable habitat for the moose population (Beest et al, 2012;Borowik et al, 2018Borowik et al, , 2020Courtois et al, 2002;Melin et al, 2016;Romportl et al, 2017;Tomek, 1977), while anthropogenic structures would reduce the amount and connectivity of available habitat (Bragina et al, 2018;Mrlík, 1995;Ree et al, 2015;Seiler, 2005;Strnad et al, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our dataset comprised summer (June 1-August 31) locations of GPS collared adult moose in Biebrza NP -24 moose (13 females and 11 males) and in Polesie NP -12 individuals (10 females and 2 males) in 2012-2016 (Borowik et al 2018(Borowik et al , 2020. Out of all positions, we chose only fixes registered at 1 h intervals that led to a final database of 139,948 fixes in Biebrza NP and 32,652 positions in Polesie NP.…”
Section: Data Collection and Analysesmentioning
confidence: 99%