Snowshoe hare demography during a cyclic population low
- 1 May 1999
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Animal Ecology
- Vol. 68 (3) , 581-594
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2656.1999.00310.x
Abstract
1.Snowshoe hare (Lepus americanusErxleben) populations were studied in south‐west Yukon during the low phase of the 10‐year population cycle. Food availability and predator abundance were manipulated in a factorial design to determine the importance of each factor in hare dynamics during this phase.2.Food was abundant during the low phase, and snowshoe hares were not food limited.3.Survival of hares was higher than at any other phase of the cycle, and predators were scarce, but >75% of hare deaths resulted from predation.4.Food addition resulted in higher hare densities and better body condition than on control sites. There were no observable effects of food addition on population rate of increase, recruitment, survival or age structure.5.Mammalian predator reduction resulted in higher hare densities, higher survival, better body condition and an older age structure. Relative to control populations, recruitment was lower and population rates of increase similar.6.The joint manipulation of food addition + predator reduction had greater positive effects on hare density and body condition than either single factor manipulation. Survival was better than on control sites, and the age structure was older than on control sites. Population rates of increase were similar, but recruitment was higher on the control areas.7.We conclude that snowshoe hare dynamics at the low of the cycle are dominated by the interaction of food and predation. Risk of predation also had indirect effects on snowshoe hare age structure and body condition.Keywords
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