Attributes of Woodland Caribou Migration Habitat in West-Central British Columbia

We examined sites used by 73 caribou located by radio-tracking during spring migration through a forested travel corridor. The physical and botanical characteristics of these sites were described to find what features (if any) distinguished them from the forest at large. Raised and open aspect, spar...

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Main Authors: Art N. Lance, Barry Mills
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Septentrio Academic Publishing 1996-01-01
Series:Rangifer
Subjects:
Online Access:https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/1278
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spelling doaj-b21e149350c647b7a1bc0d1754fa61812020-11-25T01:56:44ZengSeptentrio Academic PublishingRangifer1890-67291996-01-0116410.7557/2.16.4.12781207Attributes of Woodland Caribou Migration Habitat in West-Central British ColumbiaArt N. LanceBarry MillsWe examined sites used by 73 caribou located by radio-tracking during spring migration through a forested travel corridor. The physical and botanical characteristics of these sites were described to find what features (if any) distinguished them from the forest at large. Raised and open aspect, sparse tree cover, free-draining soils, and a simple flora with abundant lichens were features common to all the sites, but were lacking in the denser forest around. Scores for these attributes were ordinated by multidimensional scaling of similarities and differences from site to site. Separate searings for (i) terrain features, (ii) tree cover attributes, and (iii) floristic content each yielded a single cluster of points with few outliers and no particular pattern or trend. The inference is that the sites conformed to a single type with limited variation. A profile of the distinguishing characteristics was compiled and then applied to transects through the general migration area by persons unfamiliar with it beforehand. Sites which matched the profile proved easy to identify, even though they comprised only a small proportion of the area. Sites with high scores for the most distinctive attributes had more caribou at the time of radio-tracking.https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/1278habitat descriptorsordinationlichensradio-trackingforest managementRangifer tarandus
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Art N. Lance
Barry Mills
spellingShingle Art N. Lance
Barry Mills
Attributes of Woodland Caribou Migration Habitat in West-Central British Columbia
Rangifer
habitat descriptors
ordination
lichens
radio-tracking
forest management
Rangifer tarandus
author_facet Art N. Lance
Barry Mills
author_sort Art N. Lance
title Attributes of Woodland Caribou Migration Habitat in West-Central British Columbia
title_short Attributes of Woodland Caribou Migration Habitat in West-Central British Columbia
title_full Attributes of Woodland Caribou Migration Habitat in West-Central British Columbia
title_fullStr Attributes of Woodland Caribou Migration Habitat in West-Central British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed Attributes of Woodland Caribou Migration Habitat in West-Central British Columbia
title_sort attributes of woodland caribou migration habitat in west-central british columbia
publisher Septentrio Academic Publishing
series Rangifer
issn 1890-6729
publishDate 1996-01-01
description We examined sites used by 73 caribou located by radio-tracking during spring migration through a forested travel corridor. The physical and botanical characteristics of these sites were described to find what features (if any) distinguished them from the forest at large. Raised and open aspect, sparse tree cover, free-draining soils, and a simple flora with abundant lichens were features common to all the sites, but were lacking in the denser forest around. Scores for these attributes were ordinated by multidimensional scaling of similarities and differences from site to site. Separate searings for (i) terrain features, (ii) tree cover attributes, and (iii) floristic content each yielded a single cluster of points with few outliers and no particular pattern or trend. The inference is that the sites conformed to a single type with limited variation. A profile of the distinguishing characteristics was compiled and then applied to transects through the general migration area by persons unfamiliar with it beforehand. Sites which matched the profile proved easy to identify, even though they comprised only a small proportion of the area. Sites with high scores for the most distinctive attributes had more caribou at the time of radio-tracking.
topic habitat descriptors
ordination
lichens
radio-tracking
forest management
Rangifer tarandus
url https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/1278
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