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Relations between nutritional condition and survival of North American elk Cervus elaphus


Louis C. Bender, John G. Cook, Rachel C. Cook & P. Briggs Hall
Bender, L.C., Cook, J.G., Cook, R.C. & Hall, P.B. 2007: Relations between nutritional condition and survival of North American elk Cervus elaphus. - Wildl. Biol. 14: 70-80.
 
We related annual and seasonal survival of four populations of elk Cervus elaphus in the Pacific Northwest, USA, to measures and indices of individual nutritional condition. Among populations, for all mortality (human and non-human causes) sources inclusive, annual survival of adult females was correlated with a rump body condition score (rs = 0.627, P = 0.071), and survival over spring-summer-autumn (SSA) was correlated with mean ingesta-free body fat (IFBF; rs = 0.567, P = 0.088) and rump body condition score (rBCS; rs = 0.615, P = 0.050). For non-human mortality sources only, survival through SSA was correlated with IFBF (rs = 0.567, P = 0.088) and rBCS (rs = 0.615, P = 0.050), and survival over winter was correlated with withers body condition score (rs = 0.677, P = 0.045). For human-caused mortality sources only, survival over SSA was correlated with rBCS (rs = 0.696, P = 0.036) and IFBF (rs = 0.696, P = 0.036). For individuals, logistic analysis found that individual likelihood of dying from all mortality sources inclusive was best predicted (χ2 = 8.3, P = 0.004, β = -1.24) by longissimus dorsi (loin) muscle thickness, a measure of protein catabolism. For only non-human mortality sources, a model (χ2 = 16.1, P = 0.0003) containing both loin muscle thickness (χ2 = 5.7, P = 0.017, β = -1.02) and percent ingesta-free body fat (χ2 = 4.9, P = 0.027, β = -0.35) best predicted individual susceptibility to mortality. Odds ratios indicated that odds of dying increased approximately 3X for each centimeter of loin muscle catabolized and 1.4X for each percent less body fat. No condition indices at the individual level were related to survival from human-caused mortality sources. Our study populations were characterized by low-marginal condition (i.e. mean ingesta-free body fat levels of 5.9-12.3% for lactating cows in late autumn); this likely increased the prominence of measures of muscle catabolism relative to fat accretion in influencing individual elk survival. Elk populations throughout the Pacific Northwest likely show similar condition levels, and consequently individuals are predisposed to mortality to a much greater degree than under optimal foraging conditions. Management strategies which assume that nutritional condition affects vulnerability only at or near condition levels associated with ecological carrying capacity (i.e. near starvation mortality) may overestimate the impact of proximate mortality factors on adult female elk.
 
Key words: cause-specific mortality, Cervus elaphus, condition, elk, ingesta-free body fat, mortality, nutrition, nutritional condition, survival
 
Louis C. Bender, United States Geological Survey, New Mexico Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, P.O. Box 30003 MSC 4901, Las Cruces, New Mexico 88003, USA - e-mail: lbender@nmsu.edu
John G. Cook, National Council for Air and Stream Improvement, 1401 Gekeler Lane, LaGrande, Oregon 97850, USA - e-mail: cookjg@eou.edu
Rachel C. Cook, National Council for Air and Stream Improvement, P.O. Box 122, LaGrande, Oregon 97850, USA - e-mail: rcook@eou.edu
P. Briggs Hall, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, 16018 Mill Creek Boulevard, Mill Creek, Washington 98012, USA - e-mail: hallpbh@dfw.wa.gov
 
Corresponding author: Louis C. Bender
 
Received 29 December 2005, accepted 30 May 2006
 
Associate Editor: Atle Mysterud
 
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