Authors
Nicholas J DeCesare, Seth M Wilson, Elizabeth H Bradley, Justin A Gude, Robert M Inman, Nathan J Lance, Kent Laudon, Abigail A Nelson, Michael S Ross, Ty D Smucker
Publication date
2018/5
Journal
The Journal of Wildlife Management
Volume
82
Issue
4
Pages
711-722
Description
Wolf (Canis lupus) depredations of livestock are a ubiquitous source of conflict in every country where wolves and livestock overlap. We studied the spatial and temporal variation of wolf depredations of livestock in Montana during 2005–2015, including evaluations of targeted control efforts and public harvest as potential means to reduce depredations. During this time we collected spatial data for all confirmed wolf‐livestock depredations, tallied the annual number of depredation events within hunting districts, and collected data for variables potentially predictive of depredation events. We decomposed variation in depredation data into 2 distinct components: the binary presence or absence of depredation events in each district‐year, and the count of depredation events in district‐years with ≥1 event. We found that presence‐absence of depredations increased with wolf presence and wolf density, increased with …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
NJ DeCesare, SM Wilson, EH Bradley, JA Gude… - The Journal of Wildlife Management, 2018