Response of elk to installation of oil wells

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Abstract

Environmental disturbance can affect use of home range by large, free- ranging ungulates, but quantitative assessments of such effects are rare. We compared seasonal and annual use of range and habitat in the population of elk (Cervus elaphus) at Line Creek in southcentral Mortana, 1988-1991, before, during, and after installation of an oil well. Use of range by elk during the post-drilling period in autumn was different from use during drilling and pre-drilling periods, but use of range also changed during the same periods in another local population of elk not subjected to disturbance from oil drilling. Use of range grid cells containing or adjacent to the well site declined during the post-drilling period, but seasonal and annual sizes in range and boundaries for the population were similar in all periods. Distances between individually marked elk did not differ across periods, suggesting that drilling did not affect the social stability of elk. Use of forest habitats in autumn increased after initiation of drilling. Results suggested that elk compensated for site-specific environmental disturbance by shifts in use of range, centers of activity, and use of habitat rather than abandonment of range.

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Van Dyke, F., & Klein, W. C. (1996). Response of elk to installation of oil wells. Journal of Mammalogy, 77(4), 1028–1041. https://doi.org/10.2307/1382783

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