Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T06:19:07.290Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

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 [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

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.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna & Flora International 2015 

Introduction

Population decreases and range contractions of large carnivores are associated with habitat loss and high human density (Woodroffe, Reference Woodroffe2000; Laliberte & Ripple, Reference Laliberte and Ripple2004). However, the implementation of modern management policy for the conservation of large carnivores in North America and Europe has shown that carnivore decline is a reversible trend (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Swenson and Anderson2001). Populations of large carnivores are recovering following decades of systematic extermination, a pattern observed in North America (Mech, Reference Mech1995; Garshelis & Hristienko, Reference Garshelis and Hristienko2006; LaRue et al., Reference LaRue, Nielsen, Dowling, Miller, Wilson, Shaw and Anderson2012) and internationally (Swenson et al., Reference Swenson, Wabakken, Sandegren, Bjärvall, Franzén and Söderberg1995; Breitenmoser, Reference Breitenmoser1998; Valière et al., Reference Valière, Fumagalli, Gielly, Miquel, Lequette and Poulle2003). Black bears Ursus americanus, cougars Puma concolor and grey wolves Canis lupus are the three most widespread large carnivores in the USA (Feldhamer et al., Reference Feldhamer, Thompson and Chapman2003). Populations of these species have persisted and proven capable of recolonizing areas of their former range despite extermination efforts, habitat fragmentation and varying levels of human-induced mortality (i.e. via harvest or vehicle collisions). Large carnivores have the potential to recolonize the midwestern USA (henceforth Midwest) provided there is substantial suitable habitat for them in the region. As public interest and media attention regarding the expansion of populations of large predators increase, a greater understanding of recolonization potential is necessary to make sound conservation, management and policy decisions.

Black bears, cougars and wolves are adaptable as habitat generalists and can thrive in a variety of environments provided they are tolerated by people. Black bear populations across North America are generally stable or increasing (Garshelis & Hristienko, Reference Garshelis and Hristienko2006). Cougar populations in the western USA have expanded since the 1960s (Sweanor et al., Reference Sweanor, Logan and Hornocker2000). As a result, confirmations of cougars in the Midwest have increased significantly since 1990 and breeding populations have become re-established in states where the species was extirpated previously (LaRue et al., Reference LaRue, Nielsen, Dowling, Miller, Wilson, Shaw and Anderson2012). By 1960 the grey wolf had been eliminated in the USA except in Alaska, northern Minnesota, and Isle Royale (Paquet & Carbyn, Reference Paquet, Carbyn, Feldhamer, Thompson and Chapman2003). Following protection under the Endangered Species Act of 1973, wolves began to recolonize areas where they had been absent for decades, specifically in northern Wisconsin and Michigan's Upper Peninsula (Mech, Reference Mech1995).

Recolonizing large carnivores will probably have significant effects on midwestern ecosystems. In particular, populations of white-tailed deer Odocoileus virginianus, the primary prey of cougars and wolves, are likely to be affected (DelGiudice et al., Reference DelGiudice, Riggs, Joly and Pan2002; Robinson et al., Reference Robinson, Wielgus and Gwilliam2002). Cougars and wolves may affect biodiversity and plant recruitment; both species have been linked to trophic cascades in multiple systems (Hebblewhite et al., Reference Hebblewhite, White, Nietvelt, McKenzie, Hurd and Fryxell2005; Berger et al., Reference Berger, Gese and Berger2008; Ripple & Beschta, Reference Ripple and Beschta2008). Furthermore, restoration of apex predators may influence the behaviour of smaller carnivores such as coyotes Canis latrans and could control effects of mesopredator release (Berger & Gese, Reference Berger and Gese2007; Prugh et al., Reference Prugh, Stoner, Epps, Bean, Ripple, Laliberte and Brashares2009).

Understanding where breeding populations of large carnivores may become re-established, through an assessment of habitat suitability, will prepare wildlife managers for the impacts of these carnivores on midwestern ecosystems, in addition to potential human–carnivore conflicts. Although residents surveyed in midwestern states generally perceived a low level of risk from large carnivores, perception and tolerance of risk varied widely among groups (Smith et al., Reference Smith, Nielsen and Hellgren2014). Although numerous models of suitable habitat for black bears, cougars, and wolves have been developed, there are no such models for these carnivores in the Midwest apart from that of LaRue & Nielsen (Reference LaRue and Nielsen2011). Furthermore, previous habitat models do not consider potential habitat for all three species. This information may provide the foundation for management plans in states where large carnivore populations have been absent for decades. Our objectives were to (1) model potential habitat for black bears, cougars and wolves in the Midwest; (2) delineate large areas of contiguous, highly favourable habitat; (3) assess overlap in contiguous, suitable areas for each species; and (4) assess the validity of the model.

Methods

We used expert information to develop predictive habitat models for black bears, cougars and wolves (Store & Kangas, Reference Store and Kangas2001). We used this approach rather than using empirical data to build the models because such datasets are generally not available or consistent across the Midwest; these carnivores do not yet exist in substantial numbers in the majority of the region. The model included 18 states from the central Great Plains to the upper Midwest and mid-South regions (Fig. 1). We selected these states because they included areas whence all three focal species were extirpated, and areas where there are breeding populations (e.g. the Black Hills of South Dakota for cougars). Inclusion of these states facilitated the mapping of areas where potential source populations exist as well as suitable habitat in areas where these carnivores do not exist at present.

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.

We adapted a survey on the habitat requirements of the focal species from that developed by LaRue & Nielsen (Reference LaRue and Nielsen2011) to obtain expert knowledge. The survey (Supplementary Material 1) consisted of several questions regarding pair-wise comparisons of the following habitat variables: cover type, road density/distance to roads, human density, distance to water, and slope (Supplementary Table S1). We contacted furbearer biologists (19 in total) from each state included in our model, as well as university or agency researchers who specialized in black bear (12) or wolf (19) ecology. Survey participants were asked to score habitat variables, using the analytic hierarchy process (Saaty, Reference Saaty1980), in order of potential importance to each species on the basis of expert knowledge of carnivore ecology and midwestern habitats. Expert opinions from completed surveys were averaged for analysis and a consistency ratio was calculated to determine the consistency of answers among experts (Saaty, Reference Saaty1980).

We used digital data layers (all mosaics resampled to 90 × 90 m pixels) to create geospatial datasets representative of midwestern landscapes to construct the habitat suitability models in ArcGIS v. 10 (ESRI, Redlands, USA). The 2006 National Land Cover Dataset (a land cover categorization scheme applied across the contiguous USA at a resolution of 30 m; MRLC, 2006) consisted of 15 categories in the study region but we grouped similar cover types into eight categories: developed/barren and open water, deciduous forest, evergreen forest, mixed forest, shrubland, grassland, agricultural land, and wetland. Land cover categorization accuracy was 84% (Wickham et al., Reference Wickham, Stehman, Gass, Dewitz, Fry and Wade2013).

We combined digital elevation model data (USGS, 2011) into a seamless layer and clipped the layer to the perimeter of the study area. Slope was calculated in degrees and categorized on the basis of the expert opinion surveys. We used the digital elevation model data and Arc Hydro Tools v. 2.0 (ESRI, Redlands, USA) to create stream shapefiles by filling the digital elevation model and calculating flow direction and flow accumulation. We buffered the stream shapefiles on the basis of distances identified in the expert opinion surveys.

Human-density data were based on census block groups (U.S. Census Bureau, 2010a). Road data (U.S. Census Bureau, 2010b) included all primary and secondary roads for each state in the study region. For the black bear model we applied a multiple ring buffer to all roads according to the distances identified in the expert survey. For the wolf model we used the Line Density tool in the Spatial Analyst extension to ArcGIS to calculate road density. We then converted all layers to raster format and recategorized them for consistency with the expert surveys.

We used multi-criteria evaluation to transform raw data into map layers by standardizing, combining and attributing weights to variables (Store & Kangas, Reference Store and Kangas2001). We evaluated responses from the expert knowledge surveys using matrices in Excel (Microsoft, Redmond, USA) to determine the relative importance of each habitat factor. Importance was based on an optimization method in which habitat factors were ranked using pair-wise comparisons as applied in the analytic hierarchy process (Saaty, Reference Saaty1980). Use of the analytic hierarchy process closely followed procedures from LaRue & Nielsen (Reference LaRue and Nielsen2011).

For black bears and wolves, habitat suitability was determined by recategorizing and weighting each habitat factor on the basis of the averaged results of the expert surveys. We subsequently mapped these variables and their associated weights by overlay. We produced final maps of habitat for black bears and wolves, using raw scores calculated and averaged in the multi-criteria evaluation within the Raster Calculator (ESRI, Redlands, USA). For cougars, we incorporated the model of potential habitat in the Midwest created by LaRue & Nielsen (Reference LaRue and Nielsen2011) and added the nine states not included in the original model. Each pixel in each of the models was assigned a habitat suitability score of 0–100, which was converted from raw scores.

We obtained known locations of black bears and wolves to define habitat suitability thresholds for each species and validate the models (Table 1). For each species we created a set of random locations equal to the number of actual locations, and used a Kolmogorov–Smirnov test (α = 0.05) to compare the distribution of habitat suitability values associated with known locations of carnivores with the distribution of suitability values associated with each statewide sample of random locations. The Kolmogorov–Smirnov tests were used to validate the models for black bears and wolves; similar distributions of habitat suitability values between known locations and state-wide random locations would indicate that the habitat models do not predict carnivore habitat better than random. Details on the validation process for the cougar habitat model are in LaRue & Nielsen (Reference LaRue and Nielsen2011). We defined a habitat suitability threshold for black bears and wolves based on the mean minimum suitability percentage of the highest 90% of known locations; the mean value was 75% for both species. Thus, we considered pixels with habitat suitability scores ≥ 75% as highly favourable habitat for black bears and wolves. Following procedures in LaRue & Nielsen (Reference LaRue and Nielsen2011), a suitability threshold of ≥ 75% was also used for cougars. We used this threshold to convert each suitability map to a binary classification of suitable/unsuitable habitat and, for each carnivore, subsequently mapped contiguous tracts of suitable habitat large enough to sustain a viable population. We considered a large, contiguous tract of habitat to be ≥ 300 km2 for black bears, in concordance with Rogers & Allen (Reference Rogers and Allen1987), who suggested a population with 30–40 adult females would require an area of 288–385 km2. For wolves, we delineated contiguous areas of suitable habitat ≥ 500 km2 on the basis of the minimum reserve size necessary to maintain a viable population (Fritts & Carbyn, Reference Fritts and Carbyn1995). On the basis of Beier (Reference Beier1993) and Belden & Hagedorn (Reference Belden and Hagedorn1993) and following LaRue & Nielsen (Reference LaRue and Nielsen2011), areas of suitable habitat ≥ 2,500 km2 were designated as contiguous cougar habitat. We used the Region Group tool within the Spatial Analyst extension to group connected pixels with the same value (0 or 1; i.e. unsuitable or suitable). We then eliminated from each model all pixel groups < 300 km2 for black bears, < 500 km2 for wolves and < 2,500 km2 for cougars, to create maps of contiguous, suitable habitat for each species. After converting the raster maps of contiguous habitat for each species to polygon layers, we overlaid these layers and calculated polygon intersections to quantify overlap in contiguous, suitable habitat for the three focal species.

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.

Results

We received 12 black bear surveys (38.7% return rate) and 14 wolf surveys (36.8% return rate). Consistency levels were high among surveyed experts, with the exception of scores assigning importance of distance to roads for bears (Table 2). Experts indicated that cover type was the most important variable for predicting potential habitat for black bears and cougars in the Midwest, followed by human density (Table 2). Human density was the most important variable for predicting wolf habitat, followed by cover type (Table 2). Forest cover and low human density were specified as suitable attributes for all three species and were characteristic of contiguous tracts of suitable habitat (Table 3). As attributes within the slope variable (steep, moderate or gentle) were ranked almost identically by experts in regard to wolf use, slope was not incorporated in the wolf habitat model.

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.

* Values ≤ 0.10 indicate a consistency among expert opinions (Saaty, Reference Saaty1980).

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.

Almost 32% of the study region contained suitable habitat for black bear; Arkansas, Minnesota, Texas and Wisconsin had > 40% suitable habitat (Supplementary Material 2, Fig. 1a). Large, contiguous areas of suitable habitat comprised > 21% of the study region (Supplementary Material 2, Fig. 2a). The largest contiguous tracts of suitable habitat for black bear were in west-central Texas, the northern Great Lakes region (Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin), the Missouri Ozarks, and the Arkansas Ozarks, Ouachitas and Coastal Plains (Supplementary Material 2, Fig. 2a). In most states there was extensive overlap between suitable habitat for bear and wolf, and some overlap with cougar habitat; across the study region > 56% of bear habitat overlapped with cougar habitat and almost 91% overlapped with wolf habitat (Supplementary Material 3).

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

The mean habitat suitability value of pixels associated with black bear locations was 79% in Minnesota, 86% in Oklahoma and 77% in Wisconsin (79% overall). The percentage of locations with ≥ 75% suitability was 78% in Minnesota, 97% in Oklahoma and 71% in Wisconsin (77% overall). The distributions of habitat suitability values associated with known locations of black bear and state-wide random locations differed for all three datasets (D = 0.412, P < 0.001 for Minnesota; D = 0.700, P < 0.001 for Oklahoma; D = 0.359, P < 0.001 for Wisconsin).

Approximately 19% of the study region was considered suitable habitat for cougars. States with ≥ 20% suitable habitat for cougars were Arkansas, Michigan, Missouri, Texas and Wisconsin (Supplementary Material 2, Fig. 1b). Large, contiguous areas of suitable habitat represented c. 13% of the study region across seven areas: the North Dakota Badlands, South Dakota Black Hills, west-central Texas, the northern Great Lakes region (Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin), the Ozark region of Arkansas and Missouri, the Ouachita National Forest in Arkansas and Oklahoma, and the Daniel Boone National Forest and surrounding area in Kentucky and Tennessee (Supplementary Material 2, Fig. 2b). In most states that contained contiguous tracts of cougar habitat, > 90% of suitable cougar habitat was also suitable for black bears and wolves (Supplementary Material 3). The model of potential cougar habitat was validated with an independent set of confirmed cougar locations from North Dakota; see LaRue & Nielsen (Reference LaRue and Nielsen2011) for results.

Approximately 42% of the study region was considered suitable habitat for wolves, with only four states containing < 29% suitable habitat (Supplementary Material 2, Fig. 1c). Large, contiguous areas of suitable habitat comprised nearly 35% of the study region (Supplementary Material 2, Fig. 2c). Nearly half of the states included in the model contained > 50,000 km2 of contiguous, suitable habitat for wolves (Supplementary Material 2, Fig. 2c). In most states contiguous tracts of suitable wolf habitat overlapped bear habitat extensively and cougar habitat almost entirely. Across the whole study area approximately one-third of suitable wolf habitat was also suitable for both black bears and cougars (Supplementary Material 3).

The mean habitat suitability value of pixels associated with wolf locations was 89% in Michigan, 85% in Minnesota and 86% in Wisconsin (88% overall). The percentage of locations with ≥ 75% suitability scores was 93% in Michigan, 85% in Minnesota and 85% in Wisconsin (91% overall). The distributions of habitat suitability values associated with known locations of wolf and state-wide random locations differed for all three datasets (D = 0.562, P < 0.001 for Michigan; D = 0.380, P < 0.001 for Minnesota; D = 0.482, P < 0.001 for Wisconsin).

Discussion

We provide the first large-scale combined model of biologically suitable habitat for black bears, cougars and wolves in the midwestern USA; validation procedures indicated this model was successful in identifying habitat used by each of the three carnivores. In addition to delineating variation in the geographical distribution of potential habitat among the three carnivores, the model shows where these species may establish breeding populations in the future and how these populations may overlap. It also highlights areas that will be vital to the persistence of these carnivores should more widespread recolonization of the Midwest occur.

Of the three species, wolves had the highest proportion and widest distribution of suitable habitat. Our model corroborated that of Mladenoff et al. (Reference Mladenoff, Sickley, Haight and Wydeven1995, Reference Mladenoff, Clayton, Pratt, Sickley, Wydeven, Wydeven, Van Deelen and Heske2009), who delineated approximately the same amount of wolf habitat in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan within occupancy classes with ≥ 75% probability. The expert-assisted scores used to build the wolf habitat model reflected that wolves are generally non-specific to particular vegetation and ecosystem types; factors correlated to human activity, such as land ownership, road density and human population density, have greater influence over where wolves can maintain populations (Paquet & Carbyn, Reference Paquet, Carbyn, Feldhamer, Thompson and Chapman2003). Wolves differed from black bears and cougars in that experts considered human population density to be more influential than cover type. Wolves can adapt to live in nearly any habitat where they are tolerated by humans and have adequate prey (Mech, Reference Mech1995); they once occurred in forests, grasslands, deserts and tundra (Paquet & Carbyn, Reference Paquet, Carbyn, Feldhamer, Thompson and Chapman2003). In addition to broad habitat tolerance, wolves are capable of rapid, long-distance movement, a factor that played a significant role in their swift recolonization of the Great Lakes Region (Treves et al., Reference Treves, Martin, Wiedenhoeft, Wydeven, Wydeven, Van Deelen and Heske2009). The majority of wolves leave their natal packs and both sexes are equally likely to disperse (Treves et al., Reference Treves, Martin, Wiedenhoeft, Wydeven, Wydeven, Van Deelen and Heske2009), a life-history trait that facilitates recolonization.

The models predicted c. 25% less suitable habitat for black bears than for wolves in the study region. In contrast with wolves, cover type was the most influential habitat variable for black bears. Although black bears are habitat generalists, their ideal habitat consists of rugged terrain, dense understorey vegetation, and food sources in the form of hard or soft mast; such habitat characteristics become more crucial when human populations expand into bear habitat (Pelton, Reference Pelton, Feldhamer, Thompson and Chapman2003). Large, contiguous tracts of forest cover are fragmented across the study region, which may explain why the models predicted fewer contiguous tracts of suitable bear habitat than wolf habitat, particularly in the Great Plains. Although suitable habitat is distributed patchily throughout the study region, black bears are capable of long-distance movement (albeit more typical for males) and existing in small breeding populations (Maehr et al., Reference Maehr, Smith, Cunningham, Barnwell, Larkin and Orlando2003), thus the establishment of viable breeding populations in such areas is possible.

Of the three focal carnivores, cougars had the lowest proportion of suitable habitat in the region, less than half the area of suitable wolf habitat. Cougars require vegetative or topographic stalking cover and favour rugged terrain and higher elevations, whereas they avoid open areas such as agricultural land or grasslands (Pierce & Bleich, Reference Pierce, Bleich, Feldhamer, Thompson and Chapman2003). Agricultural land was twice as important for black bears as for cougars, and mixed forest was assigned a higher weight for cougar habitat than for black bear habitat. Additionally, we designated a higher minimum threshold for contiguous habitat area for cougars than for black bears or wolves on the basis of population analyses by Beier (Reference Beier1993) and Belden & Hagedorn (Reference Belden and Hagedorn1993). These factors may partially explain why, of the three carnivores, cougars have the least suitable habitat in the region. Recolonization of currently unoccupied suitable habitat is possible because cougars are known to disperse distances > 500 km (Thompson & Jenks, Reference Thompson and Jenks2005; Stoner et al., Reference Stoner, Rieth, Wolfe, Mecham and Neville2008) and traverse matrices of non-cougar habitat (Sweanor et al., Reference Sweanor, Logan and Hornocker2000). Establishment of viable breeding populations of cougars in such areas will depend largely on dispersal of females. Female cougars are more likely than males to be philopatric and to travel shorter distances (Sweanor et al., Reference Sweanor, Logan and Hornocker2000; Thompson & Jenks, Reference Thompson and Jenks2010), although emigration and dispersal distance may be influenced by human-caused mortality and the presence of wolves (Newby et al., Reference Newby, Mills, Ruth, Pletscher, Mitchell and Quigley2013).

The combined habitat models show considerable overlap in contiguous, suitable habitat for the three species, particularly for black bears and wolves. Wolves are sympatric with black bears nearly everywhere in their range in the USA and Canada, and all three carnivores inhabit areas of the western USA, such as Yellowstone National Park (Ruth et al., Reference Ruth, Smith, Haroldson, Buotte, Schwartz and Quigley2003). Although territorial or agonistic interactions and fatal encounters have been observed among all three species (Rogers & Mech, Reference Rogers and Mech1981; Boyd & Neale, Reference Boyd and Neale1992; Jimenez et al., Reference Jimenez, Asher, Bergman, Bangs and Woodruff2008), they are known to coexist through temporal and resource partitioning (Kortello et al., Reference Kortello, Hurd and Murray2007). However, cougars are vulnerable to interference and exploitation competition from wolves and bears; cougars frequently lose their kills to wolf packs and bears (Ruth & Murphy, Reference Ruth, Murphy, Hornocker and Negri2010). Moreover, competition with wolves for prey may be exacerbated in winter when prey becomes more concentrated as a result of accumulating snow (Ruth & Murphy, Reference Ruth, Murphy, Hornocker and Negri2010). Thus, the presence of wolves or bears may limit the use of suitable habitat by cougars, especially in regions that experience heavy snow. Black bears may be more successful in recolonizing suitable habitat than cougars and wolves because potential source populations of black bears are much more widespread than cougar or wolf populations. Cougars and wolves compete more directly for prey (Kunkel et al., Reference Kunkel, Ruth, Pletscher and Hornocker1999; Alexander et al., Reference Alexander, Logan and Paquet2006) and are generally perceived more negatively than bears by the public (Kellert, Reference Kellert1994; Campbell & Lancaster, Reference Campbell and Lancaster2010).

The habitat models performed well when validated with independent sets of locations from states with breeding populations. However, there are limitations to modelling carnivore habitat on a large scale using expert knowledge-based models. Although the expert knowledge used to weight each habitat variable may be an excellent predictor of suitable carnivore habitat in certain locations, applying it across a large study region is bound to result in fine-scale inaccuracies. For example, the model predicted that black bears have > 300,000 km2 of contiguous area in Texas suitable for expansion, based on low human and road densities and the presence of intermittent streams; other studies have also shown suitable habitat for black bears in the Trans-Pecos (Rice et al., Reference Rice, Ballard, Fish, McIntyre and Holdermann2009) and south-eastern regions (Morzillo et al., Reference Morzillo, Ferrari and Liu2011) of Texas. However, Rice et al. (Reference Rice, Ballard, Fish, McIntyre and Holdermann2009) highlighted the lack of water resources in the desert environment of Texas as well as the presence of agricultural areas that are primarily associated with cattle production rather than crops; thus food and water availability at lower elevations across Texas are probably insufficient to sustain viable populations of black bears.

We did not incorporate prey abundance into the models because prey density is not always a good predictor of suitable carnivore habitat (Mladenoff et al., Reference Mladenoff, Sickley, Haight and Wydeven1995) and reliable regional datasets were unavailable. We used land cover as a surrogate for prey abundance, which is generally a safe assumption throughout the study region (Roseberry & Woolf, Reference Roseberry and Woolf1998). However, in the heavily forested region of north-eastern Minnesota designated suitable for all three focal carnivores, deer populations are seasonally low and deer have been unable to recolonize the area in substantial numbers (Nelson & Mech, Reference Nelson and Mech2006). Competition for prey in this area may render it unsuitable for viable populations of all three focal species, although wolves persist by preying on moose Alces alces (Nelson & Mech, Reference Nelson and Mech2006).

Large carnivores are capable of recolonizing areas previously thought to be unsuitable or too isolated or fragmented to maintain viable populations (Hoffman & Genoways, Reference Hoffman and Genoways2005; Mladenoff et al., Reference Mladenoff, Clayton, Pratt, Sickley, Wydeven, Wydeven, Van Deelen and Heske2009), and therefore the amount of suitable habitat predicted by the models may be too conservative in some areas. For example, the Pine Ridge area of Nebraska sustains a breeding population of cougars (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Hoffman and Genoways2010) but is too fragmented to be designated a contiguous habitat tract by the model; such inaccuracy also occurs in the black bear habitat model, for eastern Tennessee. Despite localized errors, the habitat models were robust overall and should prove to be useful predictors of potential habitat for black bears, cougars and wolves on a large scale.

Conservation implications

Black bears, cougars and wolves are already recolonizing the Midwest in certain areas (Bales et al., Reference Bales, Hellgren, Leslie and Hemphill2005; Wydeven et al., Reference Wydeven, Van Deelen and Heske2009; LaRue et al., Reference LaRue, Nielsen, Dowling, Miller, Wilson, Shaw and Anderson2012) and we believe this trend will continue. The habitat models serve as a valuable tool to predict where viable breeding populations of large carnivores may establish in the study region if recolonization becomes more widespread; they are less useful for describing carnivore dispersal habitat. Large carnivores are known to traverse vast expanses of human-dominated areas during dispersal (Thompson & Jenks, Reference Thompson and Jenks2005); as such, they will not always be found in areas deemed suitable.

States projected to gain populations of previously extirpated large carnivores should prepare for novel management challenges, particularly if the state has never had a breeding population of large carnivores since the advent of modern wildlife management (e.g., Illinois, Indiana, Iowa and Kansas). The models predict that all states in the study region may contain enough contiguous, suitable habitat for a breeding population of at least one of the focal species to establish. The legal status of black bears, cougars, and wolves varies widely by state; black bears and cougars are protected in some states but hunted or considered extirpated in others; wolves are federally designated as endangered except within the boundaries of their distinct population segment (USFWS, 2012), where they are hunted in some states and protected in others. We recommend that those states in the study region without breeding populations of these species consider developing conservation plans for them, as well as incorporating them into wildlife codes.

Proactively planning for carnivore recolonization will allow wildlife agencies to prepare for potential impacts on ecosystems (particularly ungulate prey and mesopredators) and human–carnivore conflict; it may also influence management and policy decisions. Public attitudes towards large carnivores may ultimately determine the species’ fate in the Midwest (Smith et al., Reference Smith, Nielsen and Hellgren2014). Maps of potential habitat can inform and direct outreach and educational initiatives intended for residents who have lived in the absence of large carnivores for virtually a century. The maps could also assist midwestern states in efforts to assess residents’ attitudes regarding the re-establishment of large carnivores, to evaluate movement corridors that link or pose barriers between suitable habitats, and to develop appropriate management plans. Contiguous, suitable habitat tracts for black bears, cougars and wolves in the study region typically span multiple states. As large carnivores do not heed refuge or state borders, coordination across boundaries and among agencies is vital to successful carnivore management (Noss, Reference Noss1983; Forbes & Theberge, Reference Forbes and Theberge1996).

Although the conservation outlook for large carnivores has been dire during the last century and remains bleak for species such as tigers Panthera tigris and African wild dogs Lycaon pictus (Weber & Rabinowitz, Reference Weber and Rabinowitz1996), the expansion of large carnivores in North America and Europe portends the future in areas where modern management policies aimed at carnivore conservation are implemented. Weber & Rabinowitz (Reference Weber and Rabinowitz1996) contended that North America has a poor record of conserving large carnivores and should follow approaches used by other countries. However, the re-establishment and continued expansion of black bear, cougar and wolf populations in the USA would not have occurred without source populations that were protected and managed appropriately. The recovery of these species, along with brown bears Ursus arctos, Eurasian lynx Lynx lynx and wolves in Europe (Swenson et al., Reference Swenson, Wabakken, Sandegren, Bjärvall, Franzén and Söderberg1995; Breitenmoser, Reference Breitenmoser1998), show that where legislation is favourable to large carnivores, populations can resurge and recolonize areas whence they were extirpated, even as human populations increase (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Swenson and Anderson2001). Simple, easily developed habitat models may be invaluable for mapping species expansion and informing future conservation efforts.

Acknowledgements

This project was funded by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources Federal Aid Project W-163-R. The Cooperative Wildlife Research Laboratory, Graduate School, College of Science, and College of Agricultural Sciences at Southern Illinois University Carbondale provided support. We acknowledge M. LaRue for use of her cougar habitat model. We thank D. Beyer, M. Ditmer, J. Erb, K. Malcolm, F. van Manen and A. Wydeven for reviewing the expert-opinion surveys and/or providing carnivore locations for model validation. We thank L. Adams, J. Beringer, A. Bump, J. Clark, J. Erb, C. Hoving, J. Kanta, J. Kath, D. Mech, J. Olson, D. Onorato, M. Peek, R. Peterson, S. Prange, G. Roloff, C. Ryan, S. Tucker, M. Vaughan and S. Wilson for completing the expert-opinion surveys.

Biographical sketches

Julia Smith's research interests include ecology, conservation and recovery of large carnivores, habitat and corridor modelling, and human dimensions of carnivore management. Clayton Nielsen's research interests include ecology, management and conservation of mammalian wildlife species, and population dynamics of wildlife. Eric Hellgren's research interests are focused on questions of population and habitat ecology in primarily mammalian systems.

References

Alexander, S.M., Logan, T.B. & Paquet, P.C. (2006) Spatio-temporal co-occurrence of cougars (Felis concolor), wolves (Canis lupus) and their prey during winter: a comparison of two analytical methods. Journal of Biogeography, 33, 20012012.Google Scholar
Bales, S.L., Hellgren, E.C., Leslie, D.M. Jr & Hemphill, J. Jr (2005) Dynamics of a recolonizing population of black bears in the Ouachita Mountains of Oklahoma. Wildlife Society Bulletin, 33, 13421351.Google Scholar
Beier, P. (1993) Determining minimum habitat areas and habitat corridors for cougars. Conservation Biology, 7, 94108.Google Scholar
Belden, R.C. & Hagedorn, B.W. (1993) Feasibility of translocating panthers into northern Florida. The Journal of Wildlife Management, 57, 388397.Google Scholar
Berger, K.M. & Gese, E.M. (2007) Does interference competition with wolves limit the distribution and abundance of coyotes? Journal of Animal Ecology, 76, 10751085.Google Scholar
Berger, K.M., Gese, E.M. & Berger, J. (2008) Indirect effects and traditional trophic cascades: a test involving wolves, coyotes, and pronghorn. Ecology, 89, 818828.Google Scholar
Boyd, D.K. & Neale, G.K. (1992) An adult cougar, Felis concolor, killed by gray wolves, Canis lupus, in Glacier Nation Park, Montana. Canadian Field Naturalist, 106, 524525.Google Scholar
Breitenmoser, U. (1998) Large predators in the Alps: the fall and rise of man's competitors. Biological Conservation, 83, 279289.Google Scholar
Campbell, M. & Lancaster, B. (2010) Public attitudes toward black bears (Ursus americanus) and cougars (Puma concolor) on Vancouver Island. Society and Animals, 18, 4057.Google Scholar
DelGiudice, G.D., Riggs, M.R., Joly, P. & Pan, W. (2002) Winter severity, survival, and cause-specific mortality of female white-tailed deer in north-central Minnesota. The Journal of Wildlife Management, 66, 698717.Google Scholar
Feldhamer, G.A., Thompson, B.C. & Chapman, J.A. (eds) (2003) Wild Mammals of North America: Biology, Management, and Conservation, 2nd edition. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, USA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forbes, G.J. & Theberge, J.B. (1996) Cross-boundary management of Algonquin Park wolves. Conservation Biology, 10, 10911097.Google Scholar
Fritts, S.H. & Carbyn, L.N. (1995) Population viability, nature reserves, and the outlook for gray wolf conservation in North America. Restoration Ecology, 3, 2638.Google Scholar
Garshelis, D.L. & Hristienko, H. (2006) State and provincial estimates of American black bear numbers versus assessments of population trend. Ursus, 17, 17.Google Scholar
Garshelis, D.L., Noyce, K.V. & Ditmer, M.A. (2011) Ecology and population dynamics of black bears in Minnesota. In Summaries of Wildlife Research Findings (eds DelGiudice, G.D., Grund, M., Lawrence, J.S. & Lenarz, M.S.), pp. 103114. Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, St. Paul, USA.Google Scholar
Hebblewhite, M., White, C.A., Nietvelt, C.G., McKenzie, J.A., Hurd, T.E., Fryxell, J.M. et al. (2005) Human activity mediates a trophic cascade caused by wolves. Ecology, 86, 21352144.Google Scholar
Hellgren, E.C., Bales, S.L., Gregory, M.S., Leslie, D.M. Jr & Clark, J.D. (2007) Testing a Mahalanobis distance model of black bear habitat use in the Ouachita Mountains of Oklahoma. The Journal of Wildlife Management, 71, 924928.Google Scholar
Hoffman, J.D. & Genoways, H.H. (2005) Recent records of formerly extirpated carnivores in Nebraska. The Prairie Naturalist, 37, 225245.Google Scholar
Jimenez, M.D., Asher, V.J., Bergman, C., Bangs, E.E. & Woodruff, S.P. (2008) Gray wolves, Canis lupus, killed by cougars, Puma concolor, and a grizzly bear, Ursus arctos, in Montana, Alberta, and Wyoming. The Canadian Field Naturalist, 122, 7678.Google Scholar
Kellert, S.R. (1994) Public attitudes toward bears and their conservation. Proceedings of the International Conference on Bear Research and Management, 9, 4350.Google Scholar
Kortello, A.D., Hurd, T.E. & Murray, D.L. (2007) Interactions between cougars (Puma concolor) and gray wolves (Canis lupus) in Banff National Park, Alberta. Ecoscience, 14, 214222.Google Scholar
Kunkel, K.E., Ruth, T.K., Pletscher, D.H. & Hornocker, M.G. (1999) Winter prey selection by wolves and cougars in and near Glacier National Park, Montana. The Journal of Wildlife Management, 63, 901910.Google Scholar
Laliberte, A.S. & Ripple, W.J. (2004) Range contractions of North American carnivores and ungulates. BioScience, 54, 123138.Google Scholar
LaRue, M.A. & Nielsen, C.K. (2011) Modelling potential habitat for cougars in midwestern North America. Ecological Modelling, 222, 897900.Google Scholar
LaRue, M.A., Nielsen, C.K., Dowling, M., Miller, K., Wilson, B., Shaw, H. & Anderson, C.R. Jr (2012) Cougars are recolonizing the midwest: analysis of cougar confirmations during 1990–2008. The Journal of Wildlife Management, 76, 13641369.Google Scholar
Linnell, J.D.C., Swenson, J.E. & Anderson, R. (2001) Predators and people: conservation of large carnivores is possible at high human densities if management policy is favourable. Animal Conservation, 4, 345349.Google Scholar
Maehr, D.S., Smith, J.S., Cunningham, M.W., Barnwell, M.E., Larkin, J.L. & Orlando, M.A. (2003) Spatial characteristics of an isolated Florida black bear population. Southeastern Naturalist, 2, 433446.Google Scholar
Malcolm, K.D. (2011) Responses of two ecologically similar bear species (American black bear and Asiatic black bear) to human-dominated landscapes and consumptive use. PhD thesis. University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA.Google Scholar
Mech, L.D. (1995) The challenge and opportunity of recovering wolf populations. Conservation Biology, 9, 270278.Google Scholar
Mladenoff, D.J., Clayton, M.K., Pratt, S.D., Sickley, T.A. & Wydeven, A.P. (2009) Change in occupied wolf habitat in the northern Great Lakes region. In Recovery of Gray Wolves in the Great Lakes Region of the United States (eds Wydeven, A.P., Van Deelen, T.R. & Heske, E.J.), pp. 119138. Springer Science, New York, USA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mladenoff, D.J., Sickley, T.A., Haight, R.G. & Wydeven, A.P. (1995) A regional landscape analysis and prediction of favorable gray wolf habitat in the northern Great Lakes region. Conservation Biology, 9, 279294.Google Scholar
Morzillo, A.T., Ferrari, J.R. & Liu, J. (2011) An integration of habitat evaluation, individual based modeling, and graph theory for a potential black bear population recovery in southeastern Texas, USA. Landscape Ecology, 26, 6981.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MRLC (Multi-Resolution Land Characteristics Consortium) (2006) National land cover dataset. Http://www.mrlc.gov/index.php [accessed 18 May 2011].Google Scholar
Nelson, M.E. & Mech, L.D. (2006) A 3-decade dearth of deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in a wolf (Canis lupus)-dominated ecosystem. American Midland Naturalist, 155, 373382.Google Scholar
Newby, J.R., Mills, L.S., Ruth, T.K., Pletscher, D.H., Mitchell, M.S., Quigley, H.B. et al. (2013) Human-caused mortality influences spatial population dynamics: pumas in landscapes with varying mortality risks. Biological Conservation, 159, 230239.Google Scholar
Noss, R.F. (1983) A regional landscape approach to maintain diversity. BioScience, 33, 700706.Google Scholar
Paquet, P.C. & Carbyn, L.N. (2003) Gray wolf (Canis lupus and allies). In Wild Mammals of North America: Biology, Management, and Conservation, 2nd edition (eds Feldhamer, G.A., Thompson, B.C. & Chapman, J.A.), pp. 482510. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, USA.Google Scholar
Pelton, M.R. (2003) Black bear (Ursus americanus). In Wild Mammals of North America: Biology, Management, and Conservation, 2nd edition (eds Feldhamer, G.A., Thompson, B.C. & Chapman, J.A.), pp. 547555. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, USA.Google Scholar
Pierce, B.M. & Bleich, V.C. (2003) Mountain lion (Puma concolor). In Wild Mammals of North America: Biology, Management, and Conservation, 2nd edition (eds Feldhamer, G.A., Thompson, B.C. & Chapman, J.A.), pp. 744757. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, USA.Google Scholar
Prugh, L.R., Stoner, C.J., Epps, C.W., Bean, W.T., Ripple, W.J., Laliberte, A.S. & Brashares, J.S. (2009) The rise of the mesopredator. BioScience, 59, 779791.Google Scholar
Rice, M.B., Ballard, W.B., Fish, E.B., McIntyre, N.E. & Holdermann, D. (2009) Habitat-distribution modeling of a recolonizing black bear, Ursus americanus, population in the Trans-Pecos region of Texas. The Canadian Field-Naturalist, 3, 246254.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ripple, W.J. & Beschta, R.L. (2008) Trophic cascades involving cougar, mule deer, and black oaks in Yosemite National Park. Biological Conservation, 141, 12491256.Google Scholar
Robinson, H.S., Wielgus, R.B. & Gwilliam, J.C. (2002) Cougar predation and population growth of sympatric mule deer and white-tailed deer. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 80, 556568.Google Scholar
Rogers, L.L. & Allen, A.W. (1987) Habitat suitability index models: black bear, upper Great Lakes region. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biological Report 82 (10.144). U.S. Department of the Interior, Washington, D.C., USA.Google Scholar
Rogers, L.L. & Mech, L.D. (1981) Interactions of wolves and black bears in northeastern Minnesota. Journal of Mammalogy, 62, 434436.Google Scholar
Roseberry, J.L. & Woolf, A. (1998) Habitat–population density relationships for white-tailed deer in Illinois. Wildlife Society Bulletin, 26, 252258.Google Scholar
Ruth, T.K. & Murphy, K. (2010) Competition with other carnivores for prey. In Cougar: Ecology and Conservation (eds Hornocker, M. & Negri, S.), pp. 163172. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, USA.Google Scholar
Ruth, T.K., Smith, D.W., Haroldson, M.A., Buotte, P.C., Schwartz, C.C., Quigley, H.B. et al. (2003) Large-carnivore response to recreational big-game hunting along the Yellowstone National Park and Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness boundary. Wildlife Society Bulletin, 31, 11501161.Google Scholar
Saaty, T.L. (1980) The Analytic Hierarchy Process: Planning, Priority Setting, Resource Allocation. McGraw-Hill International Book Co., New York, USA.Google Scholar
Smith, J.B., Nielsen, C.K. & Hellgren, E.C. (2014) Illinois resident attitudes toward recolonizing large carnivores. The Journal of Wildlife Management, 78, 930943.Google Scholar
Stoner, D.C., Rieth, W.R., Wolfe, M.L., Mecham, M.B. & Neville, A. (2008) Long-distance dispersal of a female cougar in a basin and range landscape. The Journal of Wildlife Management, 72, 933939.Google Scholar
Store, R. & Kangas, J. (2001) Integrating spatial multi-criteria evaluation and expert knowledge for GIS-based habitat suitability modelling. Landscape and Urban Planning, 55, 7993.Google Scholar
Sweanor, L.L., Logan, K.A. & Hornocker, M.G. (2000) Cougar dispersal patterns, metapopulation dynamics, and conservation. Conservation Biology, 14, 798808.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swenson, J.E., Wabakken, P., Sandegren, F., Bjärvall, A., Franzén, R. & Söderberg, A. (1995) The near extinction and recovery of brown bears in Scandinavia in relation to the bear management policies of Norway and Sweden. Wildlife Biology, 1, 1125.Google Scholar
Thompson, D.J. & Jenks, J.A. (2005) Research notes: long-distance dispersal by a subadult male cougar from the Black Hills, South Dakota. The Journal of Wildlife Management, 69, 818820.Google Scholar
Thompson, D.J. & Jenks, J.A. (2010) Dispersal movements of subadult cougars from the Black Hills: the notions of range expansion and recolonization. Ecosphere, 1, 111.Google Scholar
Treves, A., Martin, K.A., Wiedenhoeft, J.E. & Wydeven, A.P. (2009) Dispersal of gray wolves in the Great Lakes Region. In Recovery of Gray Wolves in the Great Lakes Region of the United States (eds Wydeven, A.P., Van Deelen, T.R. & Heske, E.J.), pp. 191204. Springer Science, New York, USA.Google Scholar
U.S. Census Bureau (2010a) 2010 TIGER/Line® shapefiles: block groups. Http://www.census.gov [accessed June 2011].Google Scholar
U.S. Census Bureau (2010b) 2010 TIGER/Line® shapefiles: roads. Http://www.census.gov [accessed June 2011].Google Scholar
USFWS (United States Fish & Wildlife Service) (2012) Gray wolves in the western Great Lakes states. Http://www.fws.gov/midwest/wolf/ [accessed November 2012].Google Scholar
USGS (United States Geological Survey) (2011) National elevation dataset. Http://seamless.usgs.gov [accessed June 2011].Google Scholar
Valière, N., Fumagalli, L., Gielly, L., Miquel, C., Lequette, B., Poulle, M.-L. et al. (2003) Long-distance wolf recolonization of France and Switzerland inferred from non-invasive genetic sampling over a period of 10 years. Animal Conservation, 6, 8392.Google Scholar
Weber, W. & Rabinowitz, A. (1996) A global perspective on large carnivore conservation. Conservation Biology, 10, 10461054.Google Scholar
Wickham, J.D., Stehman, S.V., Gass, L., Dewitz, J., Fry, J.A. & Wade, T.G. (2013) Accuracy assessment of NLCD 2006 land cover and impervious surface. Remote Sensing of Environment, 130, 294304.Google Scholar
Wilson, S., Hoffman, J.D. & Genoways, H.H. (2010) Observations of reproduction in mountain lions from Nebraska. Western North American Naturalist, 70, 238240.Google Scholar
Woodroffe, R. (2000) Predators and people: using human densities to interpret declines of large carnivores. Animal Conservation, 3, 165173.Google Scholar
Wydeven, A.P., Van Deelen, T.R. & Heske, E.J. (eds) (2009) Recovery of Gray Wolves in the Great Lakes Region of the United States. Springer Science, New York, USA.Google Scholar
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

Download Smith supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 436.4 KB