4.2 Article

Evaluating moose Alces alces population response to infestation level of winter ticks Dermacentor albipictus

Journal

WILDLIFE BIOLOGY
Volume 2020, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILDLIFE BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.2981/wlb.00619

Keywords

Alces alces; Dermacentor albipictus; epizootic; modeling; moose; mortality; New Hampshire; population; survival; winter tick

Funding

  1. NH Fish & Game Department
  2. United States Fish and Wildlife Service - Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program
  3. Safari Club International Foundation
  4. LightHawk LLC

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Many wildlife populations are experiencing a variety of environmental pressures due to the direct and indirect consequences of a changing climate. In the northeast, USA, moose Alces alces are declining in large part because of the increasing parasitism by winter tick Dermacentor albipictus, facilitated by high host density and optimal environmental conditions. To test this hypothesis, and better understand the influence of this interaction on the stability of the regional population, we constructed a population viability model using data collected through comprehensive survival and productivity studies in 2002-2005 and 2014-2018 in northern New Hampshire. Years of heavy tick infestation (cpizootics) saw a marked reduction in calf survival (< 50%), adult calving (< 60%), twinning rate (< 5%) and complete loss of yearling productivity. We conducted population viability analysis using VORTEX ver. 10.2 to model this moose population for 40 years using mean demographics from both time periods, including environmental variation measured in the field during winter tick epizootic (2002, 2014, 2015, 2016) and non-epizootic (2003, 2004, 2005, 2017) years. This exercise highlights the influence of winter tick infestation on the trajectory of the population with the potential for rapid population growth or decline depending on the frequency of epizootics. We suggest a shift in moose management strategy focused on lowering moose density, assuming continued influence of climate change on the host-parasite relationship.

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