How do forest roads influence the stress response of black bears and grizzly bears?

University of Montana
Fort Lauderdale, Florida
BiologyEcology
$3,388
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About This Project

Forest roads fragment wildlife habitat and can be a significant stressor for wildlife species. We want to understand the influence roads have on animals. We are examining how forest roads affected the stress response of bears in the Blackfoot Valley, MT. We used scat-detection dogs to collect scats and analyzed the stress hormones they contain. We used these as measures of physiological stress, nutritional stress, and reproductive activity.

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What is the context of this research?

The purpose of this study is to give land managers a reason why or why not forest roads should be opened or closed to contribute to the survival of bears. As scientists, we know that some roads have a negative effect on wildlife. With that said, I want to appeal to outdoor users who need public access. This appeal is on the physiological level and self-actualization level. Our conservation strategy will meet the needs of the public whether directly or indirectly affected. Most of the data published shows that roads have a negative effect on bears. Based on observations from private landowners, bears use field roads on ranches to move and to feed. We hope to show that not all roads are bad for bears, bears use some roads more than others!


What is the significance of this project?

Assessing the effects of forest roads on the stress response of bears assumes that roads have a deleterious effect on their behavior, stress response, and activity. This study is the first to our knowledge that has directly assessed the effects of roads on black bears using cortisol. We do not believe that this is the case for all roads. No study at this point has used thyroid hormones specifically for nutritional stress assessment and/or assessed the effect of field roads. These results will help the land management agencies and personnel facilitate a balance for improving road management and reducing adverse effects to wildlife. The study will help in maintaining and improving access to our federal lands and private lands.

What are the goals of the project?

Our goals are to better understand how forest roads affect the stress response of bears using glucocorticoid, thyroid hormones, and progesterone from bear scats we collect that represent a population of bears using a fragmented landscape with different use restrictions. We want to decipher if all forest road types cause stress to bears, improve relationships between wildlife agencies and landowners in the Blackfoot Valley and to gain a better understanding of bears use of field roads on their properties, and ultimately mechanistically address long-debated relationships between bears and the roads that allow human access to where they live.

Budget

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We will be deploying two scat-detection dog and handler teams to conduct our research. Dog/handler teams will survey road transects. The total cost of our scat-detection dog and handler teams will be $12,772. We request a total of $3,388 for our field services, the remaining $9,384 have been secured through a federal grant from the Bureau of Land Management The requested monies would fund seven dog/handler field days at a cost of $484/day for one dog team.


Project Timeline

Aug 2019-March 2020: fundraise with Working Dogs 4 Conservation and write additional grants

2020: please see below

Jan-March: in-situ detection dog training with bear scats, preparation for field season

April-June: scat sampling surveys using scat-detection dogs

April-October: scat sampling on ranches

July-Sept: laboratory analyses of samples, ship samples to respective laboratories, and writing

Oct-Dec: statistical analyses of data in program R and continue writing

Apr 24, 2020

UM Conference on Undergraduate Research

Sep 26, 2020

27th International Bear Association Conference 

Meet the Team

Connor Kurz
Connor Kurz
Research Assistant

Affiliates

University of Montana
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Team Bio

I am collaborating with the Jim Sparks at the Bureau of Land Management, Greg Nuedecker with USFWS Montana Partners for Fish & Wildlife Conservation, Alan Ramsey with MPG Ranch, Marcel Huijser with the Western Transportation Institute at Montana State University, and Mike Thompson with Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks. Mike Mitchell is my lead advisor at the University of Montana and my committee consists of Erick Greene, Josh Millspaugh, and Creagh Bruener!

Connor Kurz

I am currently pursuing a Bachelor of Science in Wildlife Biology at the University of Montana. My research interests include large carnivore behavioral & physiological ecology. I am particularly interested in the mating strategies, denning ecology, and reproductive biology of black bears as well as how they respond to stress in human-dominated landscapes. Currently, I am evaluating the influence of forest roads on the stress response of black bears and grizzly bears in the Lower Blackfoot Watershed, MT using scat-detection dogs. I am using sex hormones, thyroid hormones, and cortisol as integrative measures of reproductive, nutritional, and physiological stress, respectively.

Additional Information

Here, we report a collaboration between the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, MPG Ranch, Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services Montana Partners for Fish and Wildlife Conservation, the University of Montana, the Western Transportation Institute at Montana State University, the Sacramento Zoo, the Society for Ecological Restoration, Working Dogs for Conservation, and the Audubon Society.


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