Data from: Study "Bobcat spatial ecology study in the Olympic Peninsula, Washington"
Data from: Study "Bobcat spatial ecology study in the Olympic Peninsula, Washington"
Citation
Serieys LEK, Wong W. 2025. Data from: Study "Bobcat spatial ecology study in the Olympic Peninsula, Washington". Movebank Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.5441/001/1.658Abstract
Forests are critical for sustaining biodiversity and provide vital ecosystem services globally, including renewable timber sources, nutrient flow, climate regulation, water supply and purification, and carbon sequestration. Human-caused forest loss, fragmentation, and degradation have resulted in biodiversity declines globally; unsustainable timber-logging is one of the largest drivers of forest loss and degradation. Harvest-driven shifts in forest structure and composition have considerable implications for wildlife species, with logging activities appearing beneficial for some wildlife species and detrimental to others. Our objective was to determine the effects of logging activities on fine-scale carnivore movement and habitat selection. We generated step selection functions from 1-hour interval spatial data from nine GPS-collared bobcats. Specifically, we examined how different post-harvest forest stands and canopy cover influenced bobcat habitat selection while controlling for other landscape features such as slope and distance to paved roads, logging roads, and streams in the Olympic Peninsula of western Washington, USA. We also tested the percent at which bobcat selection for canopy cover saturates. We found that bobcats avoided the young forest stands less than 5 years of age and older and mature forest stands exceeding 40 years of age. Bobcats selected for the forest age class spanning 6–15 years and gentler slopes. We also found that bobcat selection for canopy cover peaked at 66 % canopy cover. Our findings highlight the importance of evaluating different forms of human modification on species' habitat selection to inform how human resource extraction impacts species.
Keywords
Lynx rufus, animal movement, animal tracking, bobcat, carnivores, GPS, movement ecology, satellite telemetry
DOIs of related Publications
BibTex
@misc{001/1_658, title = {Data from: Study "Bobcat spatial ecology study in the Olympic Peninsula, Washington"}, author = {Serieys, LEK and Wong, W}, year = {2025}, URL = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.658}, doi = {doi:10.5441/001/1.658}, publisher = {Movebank data repository} }
RIS
TY - DATA ID - doi:10.5441/001/1.658 T1 - Data from: Study "Bobcat spatial ecology study in the Olympic Peninsula, Washington" AU - Serieys, Laurel E.K. AU - Wong, Wai-Ming Y1 - 2025/05/15 KW - Lynx rufus KW - animal movement KW - animal tracking KW - bobcat KW - carnivores KW - GPS KW - movement ecology KW - satellite telemetry KW - Lynx rufus PB - Movebank data repository UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.658 DO - doi:10.5441/001/1.658 ER -