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Biblioteca Relationships Between Nutritional Condition of Adult Females and Relative Carrying Capacity for Rocky Mountain Elk

Relationships Between Nutritional Condition of Adult Females and Relative Carrying Capacity for Rocky Mountain Elk

Relationships Between Nutritional Condition of Adult Females and Relative Carrying Capacity for Rocky Mountain Elk

Resource information

Date of publication
Diciembre 2009
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201301635119
Pages
145-152

Lactation can have significant costs to individual and population-level productivity because of the high energetic demands it places on dams. Because the difference in condition between lactating and dry Rocky Mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) cows tends to disappear as nutritional quality rises, the magnitude of that difference could be used to relate condition to habitat quality or the capability of habitats to support elk. We therefore compared nutritional condition of >or =2.5-yr-old lactating and dry cows from six free-ranging Rocky Mountain elk populations throughout the United States. Our goal was to quantify differential accrual of body fat (BF) reserves to determine whether the condition of dry and lactating cows could be used to define relevant management thresholds of habitat quality (i.e., relative carrying capacity) and consequently potential performance of elk populations. Levels of BF that lactating cows were able to accrue in autumn and the proportional difference in BF between dry and lactating cows in autumn were related (F1-2,10>=16.2, P=13.7% BF in autumn. When lactating cows are accruing

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Piasecke, Jessica R.
Bender, Louis C.

Data Provider
Geographical focus