Bodil Elmhagen

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Abstract

Modelling the spatial population dynamics of arctic foxes: the effects of red foxes and microtine cycles.

The Fennoscandian arctic fox Vulpes lagopus (L., 1758) population is critically endangered, possibly due to increased interference competition from red foxes Vulpes vulpes (L., 1758) and fading cycles in microtine rodents which cause food shortage. It is not known how these factors drive arctic fox population trends. To test their role in arctic fox decline we developed a spatially-explicit and individual-based model that allowed us to simulate fox interactions and food availability in a real landscape. A sensitivity analysis revealed that simulated arctic fox population size and den occupancy were strongly correlated with fecundity and mortality during the microtine crash phase, but also with red fox status. Model simulations suggested that arctic fox population trends depended on microtine cycles and that arctic fox distributions were restricted by red fox presence. We compared the model predictions to field data collected at Vindelfjällen, Sweden. The model recreated the observed arctic fox trend only with the inclusion of arctic fox avoidance of red fox home ranges. The results indicate that avoidance behaviours can affect population trends and hence, that relatively small numbers of red foxes can have a strong negative impact on arctic fox population size and distribution.

Reference
Shirley MDF, Elmhagen B, Lurz PWW, Rushton SP, Angerbjörn A (2009) Modelling the spatial population dynamics of arctic foxes: the effects of red foxes and microtine cycles. Canadian Journal of Zoology 87: 1170-1183.

 
   

 

 

An arctic fox tries to defends its den, but if the intruder is a red fox, it usually fails.
 

Red fox