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3 January 2020 Low-intensity monitoring of small-mammal habitat associations and species interactions in an urban forest-preserve network
Kevin W. Cassel, Dana J. Morin, Clayton K. Nielsen, Timothy S. Preuss, Gary A. Glowacki
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Abstract

Context. Anthropogenic landscape modification and fragmentation result in loss of species and can alter ecosystem function. Assessment of the ecological value of urban reserve networks requires baseline and continued monitoring. However, depending on the desired indicators and parameters, effective monitoring can involve extensive sampling that is often financially or logistically infeasible.

Aims. We employed a low-intensity, mixed-detector survey design to monitor the small-mammal community across a network of 53 fragmented forest preserves (225 sites) in a highly urbanised landscape in the Chicago metropolitan area from August to October, 2009–2012.

Methods. We used a sequential process to fit single-season occupancy and pairwise co-occurrence models for six common small mammal species to evaluate habitat associations and interspecific interactions.

Key results. Shrew species and meadow voles occurred more often in open canopy-associated habitats, whereas occupancy was greater for eastern chipmunks, grey squirrels and white-footed mice in closed-canopy habitats. Habitat associations were complicated by negative pairwise interactions, resulting in reduced occurrence of meadow voles when predatory short-tailed shrews were present and lower occupancy rates of white-footed mouse when chipmunk competitors where present. White-footed mice co-occurred with short-tailed shrews, but detection of white-footed mice was lower when either eastern chipmunks or short-tailed shrews were present, suggesting that densities of these species could be inversely related.

Conclusions. We found evidence for both habitat segregation and interspecific interactions among small mammal species, by using low-intensity sampling across the reserve network. Thus, our sampling and analysis approach allowed for adequate assessment of the habitat associations and species interactions within a small-mammal community.

Implications. Our findings demonstrated the utility of this monitoring strategy and community as bioindicators for urban-reserve networks. The approach described holds promise for efficient monitoring of reserve networks in fragmented landscapes, critical as human population densities and urbanisation increase, and we discuss how adaptive sampling methods could be incorporated to further benefit conservation efforts.

© CSIRO 2020
Kevin W. Cassel, Dana J. Morin, Clayton K. Nielsen, Timothy S. Preuss, and Gary A. Glowacki "Low-intensity monitoring of small-mammal habitat associations and species interactions in an urban forest-preserve network," Wildlife Research 47(2), 114-127, (3 January 2020). https://doi.org/10.1071/WR18082
Received: 5 May 2018; Accepted: 24 August 2019; Published: 3 January 2020
KEYWORDS
Blarina brevicauda,
conditional co-occurrence,
Microtus pennsylvanicus,
occupancy,
Peromyscus leucopus,
Sciurus carolinensis,
Sorex cinereus,
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