UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA LYNX RESEARCH
A bit about the project...
This research focuses on the
biological mechanisms driving population cycles of the Canadian lynx (Lynx
canadensis) with specific attention paid to habitat fragmentation and climate
change hypotheses. Persistent and regular population cycles produced by
specialist predators and their prey are a rarity in nature, but Canadian lynx
and snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus) display such a pervasive 10-year cycle. A
recent breakdown in southern lynx cycles and falling population numbers in the
US highlight threats to the integrity of boreal forest habitats, and may portend
more widespread consequences of continued boreal forest fragmentation. An
alternative hypothesis is that global warming is eroding the seasonality that
maintains the 10-year cycle.
Our research objectives are to 1)
regionally document the 10-year cycle break down at southern latitudes, 2)
evaluate if barriers to lynx gene flow (hence dispersal) exist on a latitudinal
gradient using genetic data, 3) use a sample of radiocollared lynx to create a
model of habitats that facilitate dispersal, and 4) examine timeseries dynamics
relative to climate data to evaluate the seasonal-forcing hypothesis.
Understanding dispersal trends is essential for managing habitat
fragmentation and protecting habitat connections in southern Alberta and British
Columbia. Likewise, climate change might be rapidly dismantling population
cycles in the boreal forest. The persistence of lynx near the Canada-US border
may depend on either quality of dispersal connections with the core Canadian
population or stemming the progression of climate change before it permanently
alters the species' dynamics. This study will help wildlife managers maintain an
important predator in southern Canada. This research will also be used to inform
forestry and other resource extraction industries, the trapping industry, and
the collective knowledge of population ecology.
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This temperate coniferous forest area contains a mix of white spruce (Picea glauca), trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides), and lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) with paper birch (Betula papyrifera), balsam poplar (Populus balsamifera), and balsam fir (Abies balsamifera). Lodgepole pine dominates drier locations and black spruce (Picea mariana) occurs in wet locations. Higher elevations contain subalpine forests consisting of lodgpole pine, alpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa), and Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmannii). The vegetation is a mix between boreal and cordilleran sometimes described as the Montane Cordillera ecozone. The landscape contains steep slopes as well as rolling hills, typical of mountain foothill areas
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