David S. Jachowski
Clemson University
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Featured researches published by David S. Jachowski.
Conservation Physiology | 2015
David S. Jachowski; Navinder J. Singh
Migratory movements are dynamic interaction of intrinsic and extrinsic factors. To improve our understanding of the mechanisms underlying movement decisions, we review and provide a novel framework for integrating observed movement behaviors and extrinsic conditions with recent technical advances in the physiology-related fields of energetics, nutrition, endocrinology, immunology and ecotoxicology.
PLOS ONE | 2016
David S. Jachowski; Christopher T. Rota; Christopher A. Dobony; W. Mark Ford; John W. Edwards
Conservation of bat species is one of the most daunting wildlife conservation challenges in North America, requiring detailed knowledge about their ecology to guide conservation efforts. Outside of the hibernating season, bats in temperate forest environments spend their diurnal time in day-roosts. In addition to simple shelter, summer roost availability is as critical as maternity sites and maintaining social group contact. To date, a major focus of bat conservation has concentrated on conserving individual roost sites, with comparatively less focus on the role that broader habitat conditions contribute towards roost-site selection. We evaluated roost-site selection by a northern population of federally-endangered Indiana bats (Myotis sodalis) at Fort Drum Military Installation in New York, USA at three different spatial scales: landscape, forest stand, and individual tree level. During 2007–2011, we radiotracked 33 Indiana bats (10 males, 23 females) and located 348 roosting events in 116 unique roost trees. At the landscape scale, bat roost-site selection was positively associated with northern mixed forest, increased slope, and greater distance from human development. At the stand scale, we observed subtle differences in roost site selection based on sex and season, but roost selection was generally positively associated with larger stands with a higher basal area, larger tree diameter, and a greater sugar maple (Acer saccharum) component. We observed no distinct trends of roosts being near high-quality foraging areas of water and forest edges. At the tree scale, roosts were typically in American elm (Ulmus americana) or sugar maple of large diameter (>30 cm) of moderate decay with loose bark. Collectively, our results highlight the importance of considering day roost needs simultaneously across multiple spatial scales. Size and decay class of individual roosts are key ecological attributes for the Indiana bat, however, larger-scale stand structural components that are products of past and current land use interacting with environmental aspects such as landform also are important factors influencing roost-tree selection patterns.
Conservation Physiology | 2018
David S. Jachowski; Matthew J. Kauffman; Brett R. Jesmer; Hall Sawyer; Joshua J. Millspaugh
Abstract Rapid climate and human land-use change may limit the ability of long-distance migratory herbivores to optimally track or ‘surf’ high-quality forage during spring green-up. Understanding how anthropogenic and environmental stressors influence migratory movements is of critical importance because of their potential to cause a mismatch between the timing of animal movements and the emergence of high-quality forage. We measured stress hormones (fecal glucocorticoid metabolites; FGMs) to test hypotheses about the effects of high-quality forage tracking, human land-use and use of stopover sites on the physiological state of individuals along a migratory route. We collected and analysed FGM concentrations from 399 mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) samples obtained along a 241-km migratory route in western Wyoming, USA, during spring 2015 and 2016. In support of a fitness benefit hypothesis, individuals occupying areas closer to peak forage quality had decreased FGM levels. Specifically, for every 10-day interval closer to peak forage quality, we observed a 7% decrease in FGMs. Additionally, we observed support for both an additive anthropogenic stress hypothesis and a hypothesis that stopovers act as physiological refugia, wherein individuals sampled far from stopover sites exhibited 341% higher FGM levels if in areas of low landscape integrity compared to areas of high landscape integrity. Overall, our findings indicate that the physiological state of mule deer during migration is influenced by both anthropogenic disturbances and their ability to track high-quality forage. The availability of stopovers, however, modulates physiological responses to those stressors. Thus, our results support a recent call for the prioritization of stopover locations and connectivity between those locations in conservation planning for migratory large herbivores.
Wildlife Society Bulletin | 2015
David S. Jachowski; Todd E. Katzner; Jane L. Rodrigue; W. Mark Ford
Wildlife Society Bulletin | 2015
David S. Jachowski; Brian E. Washburn; Joshua J. Millspaugh
Restoration Ecology | 2018
Nicholas A. McMillan; Kyran Kunkel; Donald L. Hagan; David S. Jachowski
Journal of Wildlife Management | 2018
Jennifer L. Froehly; Amy K. Tegeler; Catherine M. Bodinof Jachowski; David S. Jachowski
Journal of The Torrey Botanical Society | 2018
Kelly Daniels; Donald L. Hagan; David S. Jachowski
Wildlife Society Bulletin | 2017
James A. Vance; David S. Jachowski; Allen C. Boynton; Marcella J. Kelly
Journal of Wildlife Management | 2017
Emily D. Thorne; Charles Waggy; David S. Jachowski; Marcella J. Kelly; W. Mark Ford