Stand- and landscape-scale selection of large trees by fishers in the Rocky Mountains of Montana and Idaho

Publication Type:

Journal Article

Source:

Forest Ecology and Management, Elsevier B.V., Volume 305, p.103-111 (2013)

Call Number:

A13SCH01IDUS

URL:

http://www.fs.fed.us/rm/pubs_other/rmrs_2013_schwartz_m003.pdf

Keywords:

fisher, habitat selection, Martes pennanti, Pekania pennanti, SWAP

Abstract:

The fisher (Pekania pennant, formerly known as Martes pennanti) is a North American endemic mustelid with a geographic distribution that spans much of the boreal forests of North America. In the Northern Rocky Mountain (NRM) fishers have been the focus of Endangered Species Act (ESA) listing decisions. Habitat studies of West Coast fishers in California have consistently identified late-successional forests as important, providing direct implications for forest management and fisher conservation. In the NRM range very little is known about the habitat selection patterns of fishers relative to forest age and species composition, yet ESA petitioners have repeatedly listed habitat loss and destruction as the primary threat to fisher persistence. Between 2002 and 2006 we studied NRM fishers in the Clearwater sub-basin and eastern slope of the Bitterroot-Selway Ecosystem in Idaho and Montana. We used radio-telemetry locations from collared fishers to document fisher habitat use. We developed candidate models describing tree size, species composition, canopy closure, structural diversity, and topography to assess patterns of habitat selection relative to topographic and vegetative predictor variables measured at both stand and landscape scales. Support for these models was evaluated using Akaike Information Criteria. Fishers disproportionately used both stand sites and regional landscapes characterized by large diameter trees and avoided areas with ponderosa (a shade-intolerant species characteristic of xeric sites in the NRM) and lodgepole pine according to our best supported model. These results are consistent with other studies in the western US and Canada where large trees were deemed important, although we show that this selection in the Rocky Mountains occurs at multiple scales. These results highlight the importance of late-successional forests, consistent with a recent conservation strategy for fishers, and the importance of both stand- and landscape-level factors when directing forest management of fisher habitat in the US Rocky Mountains.

Notes:

ELECTRONIC FILE - Zoology

NOTE: "This article is a U.S. government work, and is not subject to copyright in the United States" (Digital Commons, http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1272&context=u...).

SWAP (2/19/2016) citation:
Schwartz MK, DeCesare NJ, Jimenez BS, Copeland JP, Melquist WE. 2013. Stand- and landscape-scale selection of large trees by fishers in the Rocky Mountains of Montana and Idaho. [accessed 2016 Feb 02]; Forest Ecology and Management. 305:103–111. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1272&context=u....