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Puma habitat preferences when moving and feeding predict the potential for human–carnivore conflict in shared landscapes

Title: Puma habitat preferences when moving and feeding predict the potential for human–carnivore conflict in shared landscapes
Authors: Suraci, Justin P.; Lacey, L. Mae; Freeman, Patrick T.; Stratton, Andrew; Kupar, Caitlin; Sager‐Fradkin, Kimberly; Bergman, Dylan; Ackerman, Bethany; Phillips, Kristen A.; Murphie, Shannon; Sullivan, Cassandra; Elbroch, L. Mark
Contributors: Administration for Native Americans; National Geographic Society
Source: Ecological Applications ; volume 35, issue 6 ; ISSN 1051-0761 1939-5582
Publisher Information: Wiley
Publication Year: 2025
Collection: Wiley Online Library (Open Access Articles via Crossref)
Description: Large carnivore persistence in an increasingly human‐dominated world requires coexistence between carnivores and people on shared landscapes. Yet, sharing space with carnivores presents challenges, including maintaining sufficient habitat to allow carnivores to satisfy life‐history needs (e.g., hunting, dispersal, and territory establishment) while avoiding conflict with people. To understand the drivers of carnivore habitat use and conflict in shared landscapes, we quantified puma ( Puma concolor ) habitat selection while moving and while feeding on native prey across a mosaic of developed areas, working landscapes, and wildlands on the Olympic Peninsula, Washington, USA. We fit resource selection models to movement data from GPS collars and to kill site locations for pumas across four age‐sex classes: male and female adults and dispersers. We then quantified the association between habitat preferences for each behavioral state (moving and feeding) and the spatial distribution of puma–human interactions reported to state wildlife authorities. Across age‐sex classes, puma habitat selection was more strongly influenced by human land uses when moving than when feeding, with adult females being the only age‐sex class to exhibit avoidance of development and agriculture when feeding. Correspondingly, areas categorized as highly suitable for feeding but unsuitable for movement tended to have substantially greater amounts of developed and agricultural land than areas considered suitable for both behaviors. Analysis of puma–human interactions revealed that habitat preferences when feeding were strongly associated with the probability of both domestic animal depredations and sightings of pumas by people across most puma age‐sex classes (except adult females). By contrast, habitat selection when moving was negatively associated with depredations and sightings for all pumas. These findings suggest that pumas are encountering livestock, pets, and people opportunistically in areas that are otherwise highly suitable ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
DOI: 10.1002/eap.70101
Availability: https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.70101; https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/eap.70101
Rights: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Accession Number: edsbas.F027587F
Database: BASE