Canadian Journal of Zoology | 2019

IDENTIFYING ATTRIBUTES ASSOCIATED WITH BROWN BEAR (URSUS ARCTOS) ROAD-CROSSING AND ROAD-KILL SITES

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Habitat fragmentation caused by transportation infrastructure is an issue of growing concern worldwide. In this article, we show, how secondary roads may affect landscape permeability for brown bears (Ursus arctos L., 1758). We focused on identifying environmental variables that govern the selection of road crossing zones by bears (crossing model). We also investigated whether variables that characterize road–crossing zones differ from those that are typical for bear–vehicle collision sites (collision model). The study area was located in north–central Slovakia. To identify road–crossing sites, we used the GPS fixes of 27 bears and identified 35 bear–vehicle collision sites from a different dataset. We used mixed effects logistic regression to model resource selection at road–crossing sites and to compare bear–crossing sites with bear kill–sites. The crossing model showed that the traffic volume with distance to forest and grassland were the most influential factors in bear selection of road–crossing site...

Volume 97
Pages 156-164
DOI 10.1139/CJZ-2018-0088
Language English
Journal Canadian Journal of Zoology

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