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1 March 2005 Grizzly Ursus arctos and black bear U. americanus densities in the interior mountains of North America
Garth Mowat, Douglas C. Heard, Dale R. Seip, Kim G. Poole, Gord Stenhouse, David W. Paetkau
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Abstract

We collected hair samples from bears and used microsatellite genotyping to identify individual bears on three study areas near the Canadian Rocky Mountains. We estimated density of grizzly bears Ursus arctos in eight different ecosystems across five study areas, including the reanalysis of two previously published data sets. We also estimated black bear U. americanus density for two ecosystems in one study area. Grizzly bear density was lowest in boreal and sub-boreal plateau areas, moderate in the Rocky Mountain east slopes and highest in the Rocky Mountain west slopes. Presumably these gross differences are related to ecosystem productivity. In the Rocky Mountain west slopes, grizzly bear density was lower in populations that were partially isolated from the continuous bear population to the north. Presumably, these differences have more to do with human impacts on habitat and survival than ecosystem productivity, because productivity in partially isolated areas was similar to productivity in adjacent continuous populations. We show that large differences in bear density occur down to the ecoregion scale; broader ecosystem classes such as Banci's (1991) grizzly bear zones, ecoprovinces or ecozones would include areas with major differences in density and are therefore too coarse a scale at which to predict grizzly bear density. There appears to be little movement across ecoregion boundaries further suggesting that this may be an appropriate scale at which to extrapolate density. Differences in density across finer-scale ecosystems are likely due to seasonal movements and not population level differences in density. Average bear movements were longer in less productive ecosystems. Female grizzly bears did not appear to leave their home ranges to fish for salmon Oncorhynchus spp., and extra-territorial movements by males appeared to be rare, in both ecosystems which supported spawning salmon.

Garth Mowat, Douglas C. Heard, Dale R. Seip, Kim G. Poole, Gord Stenhouse, and David W. Paetkau "Grizzly Ursus arctos and black bear U. americanus densities in the interior mountains of North America," Wildlife Biology 11(1), 31-48, (1 March 2005). https://doi.org/10.2981/0909-6396(2005)11[31:GUAABB]2.0.CO;2
Received: 30 December 2002; Accepted: 3 February 2004; Published: 1 March 2005
KEYWORDS
carrying capacity
closure
ecosystems
movements
population size
Ursus americanus
Ursus arctos
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