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Effects of season on occupancy and implications for habitat modeling: the Pacific marten Martes caurina

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Effects of season on occupancy and implications for habitat modeling: the Pacific marten Martes caurina
Names Zielinski, William J. (creator)
Moriarty, Katie M. (creator)
Baldwin, Jim (creator)
Kirk, Thomas A. (creator)
Slauson, Keith M. (creator)
Rustigian-Romsos, Heather L. (creator)
Spencer, Wayne D. (creator)
Date Issued 2015-03 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by the Nordic Board for Wildlife Research. The published article can be found at: http://www.wildlifebiology.org/.
Abstract Season affects many characteristics of populations and, as a result, the interpretations of surveys conducted at
different seasons. We explored seasonal variation in occupancy using data from four studies on the Pacific marten
Martes caurina. Detection surveys were conducted during winter and summer using either cameras or track stations.
We conducted a ‘multiple location, paired season’ analysis using data from all four study areas and a ‘multiple season’
analysis using seasonally replicated occupancy data collected at one of the areas. In the former analysis, summer
occupancy estimates were significantly lower than winter and per visit probabilities of detection were indistinguishable
between seasons. The probabilities of detection for the complete survey protocol were high (0.83 summer, 0.95
winter). Where summer and winter surveys were replicated, probability of occupancy was > 5 times higher in winter
(0.52) than summer (0.09). We considered the effect of seasonal variation in occupancy on the habitat models
developed using summer and winter survey data. Using the same habitat suitability threshold (0.5), the weighted
average of winter models predicted significantly more suitable habitat than summer models. The habitat predicted
by the summer model was at higher elevation, and was distributed among more, and smaller, patches of habitat than
the model developed using winter data. We expect a similar magnitude of differences if summer or winter data were
used to monitor occupancy. The higher occupancy in winter is probably due to the abundance of young animals
detected during dispersal. Summer survey results reflect the distribution of territory-holding adults, thus these surveys
may reliably detect breeding individuals and represent reproductive habitat. The implications of season on the
interpretation of survey results, and corresponding habitat models and monitoring programs, provide a challenge to
managers that make decisions about habitat management for martens, and other species with disparate occupancy
among seasons.
Genre Article
Identifier Zielinski, W. J., Moriarty, K. M., Baldwin, J., Kirk, T. A., Slauson, K. M., Rustigian-Romsos, H. L., & Spencer, W. D. (2015). Effects of season on occupancy and implications for habitat modeling: the Pacific marten Martes caurina. Wildlife Biology, 21(2), 56-67. doi:10.2981/wlb.00077

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