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Dive into the research topics where Heather E. Johnson is active.

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Featured researches published by Heather E. Johnson.


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2013

Relative influence of human harvest, carnivores, and weather on adult female elk survival across western North America

Jedediah F. Brodie; Heather E. Johnson; Michael S. Mitchell; Peter Zager; Kelly M. Proffitt; Mark Hebblewhite; Matthew J. Kauffman; Bruce K. Johnson; John A. Bissonette; Chad J. Bishop; Justin A. Gude; Jeff Herbert; Kent R. Hersey; Mark A. Hurley; Paul M. Lukacs; Scott McCorquodale; Eliot J. B. McIntire; Josh Nowak; Hall Sawyer; Douglas W. Smith; P. J. White

Summary 1. Well-informed management of harvested species requires understanding how changing ecological conditions affect demography and population dynamics, information that is lacking for many species. We have limited understanding of the relative influence of carnivores, harvest, weather and forage availability on elk Cervus elaphus demography, despite the ecological and economic importance of this species. We assessed adult female survival, a key vital rate for population dynamics, from 2746 radio-collared elk in 45 populations across western North America that experience wide variation in carnivore assemblage, harvest, weather and habitat conditions. 2. Proportional hazard analysis revealed that ‘baseline’ (i.e. not related to human factors) mortality was higher with very high winter precipitation, particularly in populations sympatric with wolves Canis lupus. Mortality may increase via nutritional stress and heightened vulnerability to predation in snowy winters. Baseline mortality was unrelated to puma Puma concolor presence, forest cover or summer forage productivity. 3. Cause-specific mortality analyses showed that wolves and all carnivore species combined had additive effects on baseline elk mortality, but only reduced survival by <2%. When human factors were included, ‘total’ adult mortality was solely related to harvest; the influence of native carnivores was compensatory. Annual total mortality rates were lowest in populations sympatric with both pumas and wolves because managers reduced female harvest in areas with abundant or diverse carnivores.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Influence of precipitation and crop germination on resource selection by mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) in southwest Colorado

Emily M. Carrollo; Heather E. Johnson; Justin W. Fischer; Matthew Hammond; Patricia D. Dorsey; Charles T. Anderson; Kurt C. VerCauteren; W. David Walter

Mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) populations in the western United States provide many benefits to local economies but can also cause considerable damage to agriculture, particularly damage to lucrative crops. Limited information exists to understand resource selection of mule deer in response to annual variation in crop rotation and climatic conditions. We tested the hypothesis that mule deer select certain crops, and in particular sunflower, based on annual climatic variability. Our objective was to use movements, estimates of home range, and resource selection analysis to identify resources selected by mule deer. We used annually-derived crop-specific datasets along with Global Positioning System collars to monitor 14 mule deer in an agricultural area near public lands in southwestern Colorado, USA. We estimated home ranges for two winter seasons that ranged between 7.68 and 9.88 km2, and for two summer seasons that ranged between 5.51 and 6.24 km2. Mule deer selected areas closer to forest and alfalfa for most periods during 2012, but selected areas closer to sunflower in a majority of periods during 2013. Considerable annual variation in climate patterns and precipitation levels appeared to influence selection by mule deer because of variability in crop rotation and success of germination of specific crops.


Global Change Biology | 2017

Increases in residential and energy development are associated with reductions in recruitment for a large ungulate

Heather E. Johnson; Jessica R. Sushinsky; A. Andrew Holland; Eric J. Bergman; Trevor Balzer; James Garner; Sarah E. Reed

Land-use change due to anthropogenic development is pervasive across the globe and commonly associated with negative consequences for biodiversity. While land-use change has been linked to shifts in the behavior and habitat-use patterns of wildlife species, little is known about its influence on animal population dynamics, despite the relevance of such information for conservation. We conducted the first broad-scale investigation correlating temporal patterns of land-use change with the demographic rates of mule deer, an iconic species in the western United States experiencing wide-scale population declines. We employed a unique combination of long-term (1980-2010) data on residential and energy development across western Colorado, in conjunction with congruent data on deer recruitment, to quantify annual changes in land-use and correlate those changes with annual indices of demographic performance. We also examined annual variation in weather conditions, which are well recognized to influence ungulate productivity, and provided a basis for comparing the relative strength of different covariates in their association with deer recruitment. Using linear mixed models, we found that increasing residential and energy development within deer habitat were correlated with declining recruitment rates, particularly within seasonal winter ranges. Residential housing had two times the magnitude of effect of any other factor we investigated, and energy development had an effect size similar to key weather variables known to be important to ungulate dynamics. This analysis is the first to correlate a demographic response in mule deer with residential and energy development at large spatial extents relevant to population performance, suggesting that further increases in these development types on deer ranges are not compatible with the goal of maintaining highly productive deer populations. Our results underscore the significance of expanding residential development on mule deer populations, a factor that has received little research attention in recent years, despite its rapidly increasing footprint across the landscape.


Biological Conservation | 2015

Shifting perceptions of risk and reward: Dynamic selection for human development by black bears in the western United States

Heather E. Johnson; Stewart W. Breck; Sharon Baruch-Mordo; D.L. Lewis; C.W. Lackey; Kenneth R. Wilson; John Broderick; J.S. Mao; Jon P. Beckmann


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2018

Human development and climate affect hibernation in a large carnivore with implications for human–carnivore conflicts

Heather E. Johnson; David L. Lewis; Tana L. Verzuh; Cody F. Wallace; Rebecca M. Much; Lyle K. Willmarth; Stewart W. Breck


Journal of Wildlife Management | 2018

Factors influencing elk recruitment across ecotypes in the Western United States: Factors Influencing Elk Recruitment

Paul M. Lukacs; Michael S. Mitchell; Mark Hebblewhite; Bruce K. Johnson; Heather E. Johnson; Matthew J. Kauffman; Kelly M. Proffitt; Peter Zager; Jedediah F. Brodie; Kent R. Hersey; A. Andrew Holland; Mark A. Hurley; Scott McCorquodale; Arthur D. Middleton; Matthew Nordhagen; J. Joshua Nowak; Daniel P. Walsh; P. J. White


Wildlife Society Bulletin | 2014

Evaluation of Techniques to Reduce Deer and Elk Damage to Agricultural Crops

Heather E. Johnson; Justin W. Fischer; Matthew Hammond; Patricia D. Dorsey; W. David Walter; Charles W. Anderson; Kurt C. VerCauteren


Wildlife Society Bulletin | 2018

Experience, attitudes, and demographic factors influence the probability of reporting human-black bear interactions: Reporting Human-Bear Interactions

Ryan C. Wilbur; Stacy A. Lischka; Jessica R. Young; Heather E. Johnson


Journal of Wildlife Management | 2018

Assessing ecological and social outcomes of a bear-proofing experiment: Bear-Proofing to Reduce Human-Bear Conflicts

Heather E. Johnson; David L. Lewis; Stacy A. Lischka; Stewart W. Breck


Biological Conservation | 2018

Compounding effects of human development and a natural food shortage on a black bear population along a human development-wildland interface

Jared S. Laufenberg; Heather E. Johnson; Paul F. Doherty; Stewart W. Breck

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Stewart W. Breck

United States Department of Agriculture

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Bruce K. Johnson

Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife

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Justin W. Fischer

United States Department of Agriculture

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Kent R. Hersey

Utah Division of Wildlife Resources

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Kurt C. VerCauteren

Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

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Mark A. Hurley

Idaho Department of Fish and Game

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