7 results on '"Wang, Guiming"'
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2. Birth date promotes a tortoise or hare tactic for body mass development of a long-lived male ungulate
- Author
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Michel, Eric S., Demarais, Stephen, Strickland, Bronson K., and Wang, Guiming
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Birth date promotes a tortoise or hare tactic for body mass development of a long-lived male ungulate.
- Author
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Michel, Eric S., Demarais, Stephen, Strickland, Bronson K., and Wang, Guiming
- Subjects
BIRTH date ,WHITE-tailed deer ,BODY mass index ,ANTLERS ,UNGULATES ,PHENOTYPES ,UNGULATE size ,ANIMAL reproduction - Abstract
Maternal and early-life influences may affect life-long individual phenotype, potentially influencing reproductive success. However, some individuals may compensate for a poor start to life, which may improve longevity and reproductive success later in life. We developed four models to assess whether maternal characteristics (age, body mass and previous year cumulative lactation demand) and/or birth date influenced a long-lived mammal's phenotype to maturity. We used a directional separation analysis to assess the relative influence of each maternal characteristic and birth date on captive male white-tailed deer ( Odocoileus virginianus) body mass and antler size. We found that birth date was the only characteristic that persistently influenced male body mass. Depending on when offspring were born, they used alternative tactics to increase their body mass. Birth date positively influenced body mass at 1, 2 and 3 years of age-indicating males displayed faster growth and compensated for late birth (hare tactic). However, early-, heavy-born males were heavy juveniles, and juvenile body mass positively influenced mature body mass (slow but steady growth; tortoise tactic). Our findings provide a first evidence that a long-lived ungulate can display alternative tactics to achieve heavy body mass; individuals are either born early and heavy and are heavy throughout life (tortoise), or light, late-born individuals compensate for a poor start in life by growing at a faster rate to equal or surpass the body mass of early-born individuals (hare). Either tactic may be viable if it influences reproductive success as body mass positively influences access to mates in ungulates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Improved nutrition cues switch from efficiency to luxury phenotypes for a long-lived ungulate.
- Author
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Michel, Eric S., Flinn, Emily B., Demarais, Stephen, Strickland, Bronson K., Wang, Guiming, and Dacus, Chad M.
- Subjects
PHENOTYPIC plasticity ,PHYLOGEOGRAPHY ,ROE deer ,CLADISTIC analysis ,PARSIMONIOUS models ,ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
Cervid phenotype can be categorized as efficiency, which promotes survival but not extravagant growth, or luxury which promotes growth of large weaponry and body size. Although nutritional variation greatly influences these phenotypic forms, the potential for subspecies-linked genetic or founder effects from restocking efforts of harvested species has not been eliminated. We measured intergenerational phenotypic change of males in response to improved nutrition in three captive-reared populations of white-tailed deer. Study animals were offspring of females captured from three regions displaying variation in antler and body size as well as nutritional variation. We fed all animals a high-quality diet and measured antler and body size for two generations. We predicted that improved long-term nutrition would cue a switch from efficiency to luxury phenotype for all populations and that regional compensation of antler and body size would occur. Improved nutrition positively influenced all measures of antler and body size; however, changes varied in magnitude. Antler size was more responsive than body size. Improved nutrition also facilitated regional compensation of antler size and partial compensation of body size. Our results show that improved long-term nutrition cues a shift from efficiency to luxury phenotype in a long-lived cervid with weaponry being more responsive than body size. Compensation of antler size suggests that weaponry is greatly influenced by nutrition and is not restricted by subspecies-linked genetic or founder effects from restocking efforts related to our regional populations. Therefore, strategies to improve cervid antler and body size should include habitat management that elevates long-term diet quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Adjusting for seasonal harvest bias in the lactation index for white-tailed deer management.
- Author
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Campbell, Kamen L., Strickland, Bronson K., Demarais, Stephen, Jones, Phillip D., Wang, Guiming, Dacus, Chad M., Cook, Christopher, and Knox, W. Matt
- Subjects
WHITE-tailed deer ,LACTATION ,WILDLIFE management ,DEER hunting ,HARVESTING ,PARTURITION - Abstract
ABSTRACT Recruitment estimates are critical for making wildlife harvest decisions. White-tailed deer ( Odocoileus virginianus) lactation rates are often used to estimate fawn recruitment. Relatively long hunting seasons in the southern United States commonly include the period when females cease lactating, with concomitant reduction in the detection of lactation by hunters. We used 1,587 site- and year-specific lactation rates from 383 deer populations in Mississippi, Alabama, and Virginia, USA, to model the rate of decline in lactation detection across the hunting season. For each population, we calculated distance of mean female harvest date from median parturition date, and included linear, quadratic, and cubic functions of mean harvest day as potential explanatory variables. We grouped populations into 18 regions based on median conception date and tested 12 models using year and region as possible random effects. Mean female harvest occurred 92.5-210.7 days past median parturition date ( [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Population-level response of coyotes to a pulsed resource event.
- Author
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Petroelje, Tyler, Belant, Jerrold, Beyer, Dean, Wang, Guiming, and Leopold, Bruce
- Subjects
POPULATION biology ,COYOTE ,FORAGING behavior ,BIOAVAILABILITY ,FOOD consumption ,WHITE-tailed deer - Abstract
From foraging theory, generalist predators should increase consumption of prey if prey availability increases. Pulsed resource events introduce a large influx of prey to predators that may exhibit a functional response of increased consumption rate on, or specialization to, this abundant food resource. We predicted that coyotes ( Canis latrans) would respond functionally to numerical increases of neonate white-tailed deer ( Odocoileus virginianus) during the pulsed resource event of parturition. We used howl surveys and deer camera surveys with occupancy modeling to estimate densities for coyotes, adult deer, and fawns, respectively, in Upper Peninsula of Michigan, USA, 2009-2011. We estimated biomass of adult and fawn deer consumed by coyotes during 2 periods [fawn limited mobility period (LMP) and social mobility period (SMP)] in May-August each year. Coyote densities were 0.32 and 0.37/km for 2010-2011, respectively. Adult deer densities (3.7-3.9/km) and fawn densities (0.6-1.3/km) were similar across years. Overall, fawn hair occurrence in coyote scats was 2.3 times greater in LMP than SMP. Estimated consumption of fawns between periods ( n = 157-880) by coyotes varied, suggesting a functional response, with increasing consumption of fawns relative to their availability. Coyotes, on average, consumed 2.2 times greater biomass of fawns than adults across years, and consumed 1.5 times greater fawn biomass, on average, during LMP than SMP. We suggest that consumption rates of coyotes is associated positively with increases in fawn density, and fawn consumption by coyotes follows predictions of optimal foraging theory during this pulsed resource event. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. White-tailed deer incidents with U.S. civil aircraft.
- Author
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Biondi, Kristin M., Belant, Jerrold L., Martin, James A., DeVault, Travis L., and Wang, Guiming
- Subjects
WHITE-tailed deer ,AIRCRAFT accidents ,WILDLIFE management ,AIRPORT management ,TRAFFIC safety & wildlife - Abstract
Aircraft incidents with ungulates cause substantial economic losses and pose risks to human safety. We analyzed 879 white-tailed deer ( Odocoileus virginianus) incidents with United States civil aircraft from 1990 to 2009 reported in the Federal Aviation Administration National Wildlife Strike Database. During that time, deer incidents followed a quadratic response curve, peaking in 1994 and declining thereafter. There appeared to be some seasonal patterning in incident frequency, with deer incidents increasing overall from January to November, and peaking in October and November (30.7%). Most incidents (64.8%) occurred at night, but incident rates were greatest ( P ≤ 0.001) at dusk. Landing-roll represented 60.7% of incidents and more incidents occurred during landing than take-off ( P ≤ 0.001). Almost 70% of deer incidents had an effect on flight. About 6% of pilots attempted to avoid deer, and were less likely to sustain damage. Aircraft were 25 times more likely to be destroyed when multiple deer were struck versus a single individual. Deer incidents represented 0.9% of all wildlife incidents, yet 5.4% of total estimated costs. Reported costs for deer incident damages during this period exceeded US$36 million, with US$75 million in total estimated damages. Deer incidents resulted in 1 of 24 human deaths and 26 of 217 injuries reported for all wildlife incidents with aircraft during the reporting period. Managers should implement exclusion techniques (e.g., fences, cattle guards, or electrified mats) to maximize reductions in deer use of airfields. Where exclusion is not practical, managers should consider lethal control, habitat modifications, increased monitoring and hazing, and improved technology to aircraft and runway lighting to reduce incidents at airports. © 2011 The Wildlife Society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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