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Suitable habitat for recolonizing large carnivores in the midwestern USA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2015

Julia B. Smith*
Affiliation:
Mexican Wolf Recovery Program, Arizona Game and Fish Department, Alpine, Arizona, USA
Clayton K. Nielsen
Affiliation:
Cooperative Wildlife Research Laboratory and Department of Forestry, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Carbondale, Illinois, USA
Eric C. Hellgren
Affiliation:
Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA
*
(Corresponding author) E-mail jbsmith@azgfd.gov
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Abstract

Large carnivores are recolonizing parts of North America and Europe as a result of modern management and conservation policy. In the midwestern USA, black bears Ursus americanus, cougars Puma concolor and grey wolves Canis lupus have the potential to recolonize provided there is suitable habitat. Understanding where large carnivores may become re-established will prepare resource professionals for the inevitable ecosystem effects and potential human–carnivore conflicts associated with these species. We developed individual and combined models of suitable habitat for black bears, cougars and wolves in 18 midwestern states, using geospatial data, expert-opinion surveys, and multi-criteria evaluation. Large, contiguous areas of suitable habitat comprised 35, 21 and 13% of the study region for wolves, bears and cougars, respectively. Approximately 12% of the region was considered suitable for all three species. Arkansas, Minnesota, Texas and Wisconsin had the highest proportions (> 40%) of suitable habitat for black bears; Arkansas, Michigan, Missouri, Texas and Wisconsin had the highest proportions (≥ 20%) of suitable habitat for cougars; and only in four states in the study region was < 29% of land suitable wolf habitat. Models performed well when validated by comparing suitability values of independent sets of known carnivore locations to those of random locations. Contiguous areas of suitable habitat typically spanned multiple states, thus coordination across boundaries and among agencies will be vital to successful conservation of these species. Our models highlight differences in habitat requirements and geographical distribution of potential habitat among these carnivores, as well as areas vital to their persistence in the Midwest.

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Copyright
Copyright © Fauna & Flora International 2015 
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Habitat suitability of the midwestern USA for (a) black bear Ursus americanus, (b) cougar Puma concolor and (c) wolf Canis lupus, based on expert knowledge.

Figure 1

Table 1 Locations of black bear Ursus americanus (adult female) and wolf Canis lupus (adult male and female) used to define habitat suitability thresholds for each species and for habitat model validation, with state, species, number of locations, and source of data.

Figure 2

Table 2 Weights (representing the averaged, relative scores of importance to potential carnivore habitat) and consistency ratio for variables used in the development of habitat suitability models for black bears, cougars Puma concolor and wolves in the midwestern USA in 2012.

Figure 3

Table 3 Mean values of habitat variables (human density, road density, forest, grassland/shrubland, agriculture, developed) associated with contiguous, suitable habitat for black bears, cougars and wolves in the midwestern United States, 2012.

Figure 4

Fig. 2 Contiguous tracts of suitable habitat (expert-assisted scores ≥ 75%) for (a) black bear, (b) cougar and (c) wolf in the midwestern USA.

Supplementary material: PDF

Smith supplementary material

Supplementary material

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