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Carnivore re-colonisation: reality, possibility and a non-equilibrium century for grizzly bears in the southern Yellowstone ecosystem

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 February 2004

Sanjay Pyare
Affiliation:
Denver Zoological Foundation, 1650 Hole in the Wall Rd, Potomac MT 59823, USA
Steve Cain
Affiliation:
Office of Science and Resource Management, Grand Teton National Park, Box 170, Moose, Wyoming 83012, USA
Dave Moody
Affiliation:
Wyoming Game and Fish, Lander, Wyoming, 82520, USA
Chuck Schwartz
Affiliation:
USGS Northern Rocky Mountains Service Center, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana 59717, USA
Joel Berger
Affiliation:
North American Program, Wildlife Conservation Society, Box 340, Moose, Wyoming 83012, USA
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Abstract

Most large native carnivores have experienced range contractions due to conflicts with humans, although neither rates of spatial collapse nor expansion have been well characterised. In North America, the grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) once ranged from Mexico northward to Alaska, however its range in the continental USA has been reduced by 95–98%. Under the U. S. Endangered Species Act, the Yellowstone grizzly bear population has re-colonised habitats outside Yellowstone National Park. We analysed historical and current records, including data on radio-collared bears, (1) to evaluate changes in grizzly bear distribution in the southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE) over a 100-year period, (2) to utilise historical rates of re-colonisation to project future expansion trends and (3) to evaluate the reality of future expansion based on human limitations and land use. Analysis of distribution in 20-year increments reflects range reduction from south to north (1900–1940) and expansion to the south (1940–2000). Expansion was exponential and the area occupied by grizzly bears doubled approximately every 20 years. A complementary analysis of bear occurrence in Grand Teton National Park also suggests an unprecedented period of rapid expansion during the last 20–30 years. The grizzly bear population currently has re-occupied about 50% of the southern GYE. Based on assumptions of continued protection and ecological stasis, our model suggests total occupancy in 25 years. Alternatively, extrapolation of linear expansion rates from the period prior to protection suggests total occupancy could take >100 years. Analyses of historical trends can be useful as a restoration tool because they enable a framework and timeline to be constructed to pre-emptively address the social challenges affecting future carnivore recovery.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2004 The Zoological Society of London

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