Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) movements and habitat use predict human-caused mortality across temporal scales
Citation
Parsons B, Wilson A E, Graham K, Stenhouse G B, felipe (2023). Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) movements and habitat use predict human-caused mortality across temporal scales. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/2tcpmu accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-04.Description
This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Parsons, Bethany, Wilson, Abbey E., Graham, Karen, Stenhouse, Gordon B. (2023): Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) movements and habitat use predict human-caused mortality across temporal scales. Canadian Journal of Zoology 101 (2): 81-94, DOI: 10.1139/cjz-2022-0054, URL: https://doi.org/10.1139/cjz-2022-0054
Abstract
While the location of wildlife mortalities provides some insight on the cause of death, identifying the risk factors associated with mortality events and in which cases these factors result in death requires information on individual behaviour prior to death. With access to a long-term database of grizzly bear (Ursus arctos L., 1758) GPS locations, we investigated how behaviour differed between individuals that died of anthropogenic causes and those that survived across different temporal scales. We analyzed movement (diurnality and daily displacement) and habitat use (modelled risk and habitat quality) of grizzly bears residing in Alberta, Canada, from 2005 to 2021 to determine whether grizzly bears that died and grizzly bears that survived differed in these behaviours 2 –4 years, 1 year, and 1 week prior to death, and whether patterns changed over time. We found that diurnality increased in the last year of life, while displacement increased in the last week of life, with differences becoming greater nearer the day of death. Grizzly bears that died used high-risk and low-quality habitat at all time scales, and these behaviours increased as death approached. Our analysis suggests that grizzly bear mortalities do not occur randomly but happen at times when individuals exhibit high-risk behaviours. This information can be used to make management decisions related to habitat management, road use, and human access.
Taxonomic Coverages
Geographic Coverages
Bibliographic Citations
Contacts
Bethany Parsonsoriginator
Abbey E. Wilson
originator
Karen Graham
originator
Gordon B. Stenhouse
originator
Guido Sautter
administrative point of contact
email: gsautter@gmail.com
homepage: http://plazi.org
publisher
Plazi
Bern
CH
email: info@plazi.org
homepage: https://plazi.org/
felipe
metadata author
Plazi