Day versus night use of forest by red and roe deer as determined by Corine Land Cover and Copernicus Tree Cover Density: assessing use of geographic layers in movement ecology

2022 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Day versus night use of forest by red and roe deer as determined by Corine Land Cover and Copernicus Tree Cover Density: assessing use of geographic layers in movement ecology​
Salvatori, M.; De Groeve, J.; van Loon, E.; De Baets, B.; Morellet, N.; Focardi, S. & Bonnot, N. C. et al.​ (2022) 
Landscape Ecology,.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10980-022-01416-w 

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Salvatori, M.; De Groeve, J.; van Loon, E.; De Baets, B.; Morellet, N.; Focardi, S.; Bonnot, N. C.; Gehr, B.; Griggio, M.; Heurich, M.; Cagnacci, F.
Abstract
Abstract Context Diel use of forest and open habitats by large herbivores is linked to species-specific needs of multiple and heterogeneous resources. However, forest cover layers might deviate considerably for a given landscape, potentially affecting evaluations of animals’ habitat use. Objectives We assessed inconsistency in the estimates of diel forest use by red and roe deer at GPS location and home range (HR) levels, using two geographic layers: Tree Cover Density (TCD) and Corine Land Cover (CLC). Methods We first measured the classification mismatch of red and roe deer GPS locations between TCD and CLC, also with respect to habitat units’ size. Then, we used Generalised Least Squares models to assess the proportional use of forest at day and night at the GPS location and HR levels, both with TCD and CLC. Results About 20% of the GPS locations were inconsistently classified as forest or open habitat by the two layers, particularly within smaller habitat units. Overall proportion of forest and open habitat, though, was very similar for both layers. In all populations, both deer species used forest more at day than at night and this pattern was more evident with TCD than with CLC. However, at the HR level, forest use estimates were only marginally different between the two layers. Conclusions When estimating animal habitat use, geographic layer choice requires careful evaluation with respect to ecological questions and target species. Habitat use analyses based on GPS locations are more sensitive to layer choice than those based on home ranges.
Issue Date
2022
Journal
Landscape Ecology 
ISSN
0921-2973
eISSN
1572-9761
Language
English

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