High numbers of red deer Cervus elaphus pose a challenge for natural forests because of their high browsing intensities, especially during winter months. To mitigate this human–wildlife conflict, conservation management in central Europe involves luring red deer into fenced winter-feeding sites. The supplementary food provided in these so-called winter enclosures strongly differs from the natural diet of red deer. Dietary shifts, however, can lead to an imbalance of the gut microbiota, which could promote bacterial pathogens. Moreover, increased inter-individual contact in winter enclosures enhances the exchange of symbiotic but also pathogenic bacteria. In this study, we used high-throughput sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene in fecal samples of red deer inhabiting the Bavarian Forest National Park to investigate differences in the gut bacterial microbiota between individuals in winter enclosures and individuals that ranged freely in the forests in winter. We also investigated the occurrence of potential zoonotic bacterial pathogens in both study groups. Our results revealed that proportions of bacterial taxa, alpha- and beta-diversities, and relative abundances of amplicon sequence variants in the gut bacterial microbiota of the two groups differed. These differences were attributed to the enrichment of bacterial taxa involved in the digestion of the supplementary food and to different natural diets consumed before entering the winter enclosures. We detected sequences with high similarities to known red deer pathogens in both study groups, but their relative abundances were low, which suggests that the population of red deer of the Bavarian Forest National Park is healthy.
Large herbivores are drivers of important processes that can shape the composition and structure of forest ecosystems (Gill and Beardall 2001, Rooney and Waller 2003, Tremblay et al. 2007). Their consumption of vegetation affects the growth and survival of many herb, shrub, and tree species and modifies patterns of the relative abundance and competition of these plants (Côté et al. 2004). Moreover, seed dispersal, urination, defecation, and the resource pulse after death of an herbivore can create heterogeneity at various spatial and temporal scales (Bardgett and Wardle 2003, Selva Fernandez 2004, Pellerin et al. 2016). Although these diverse processes caused by large herbivores are important for forest ecosystems, these activities can cause significant damage in managed forests. In particular, browsing and bark stripping are major obstacles to nature-oriented forestry (Hothorn and Müller 2010). Wildlife management in such set-ups is difficult because the well-being of the protected species, protection of natural processes, and limitation of forest damage in the surroundings of protected areas need to be considered (Schaller 2007, Gerner et al. 2012). At the same time, human intervention needs to be kept to a minimum (Günther and Heurich 2013).
In Europe, this conflict of interest has increased because populations of ungulates, especially red deer Cervus elaphus, have grown enormously in recent decades mainly because of hunting management, changes in agricultural practices and extermination of large carnivores (Apollonio et al. 2010). The impact of red deer on forests is especially high during winter months when the animals shift from a diverse diet to a diet consisting to a large extent of coniferous and deciduous trees (Krojerová-Prokešová et al. 2010). A common management tool in the Alps for the reduction of browsing pressure is the use of winter enclosures (Belotti et al. 2014, Heurich et al. 2015). In the Bavarian Forest National Park supplementary food is placed in the enclosures to attract red deer, starting in October. In November, the gates are closed; animals that arrive later are caught in a pre-enclosure before they are allowed to enter the main enclosure. The red deer remain in captivity until the beginning of the vegetation period at the end of April or in May, depending on weather conditions. This management measure strongly reduces bark stripping and browsing during winter (Heurich et al. 2015).
Research into the impact of such winter enclosures and supplementary feeding has revealed both positive and negative results (Putman and Staines 2004). Positive aspects include increased winter survival (Peterson and Messmer 2007), less forest damage (Gundersen et al. 2004), more efficient population control (Heurich et al. 2011), and better trophy quality (Putman and Staines 2004). Negative aspects, in addition to the high costs related to the maintenance of winter enclosures and food provision (Putman and Staines 2004), include increased browsing activity close to the winter enclosures (Putman and Staines 2004, Möst et al. 2015), altered spatial behavior (Sahlsten et al. 2010, Ossi et al. 2017), increased stress (Li et al. 2007), and risk of disease transmission attributable to the high animal densities at shared feeding sites (Santín-Durán et al. 2004, Cotterill et al. 2018). In addition to these acknowledged impacts, this management tool might also cause alterations in the symbiotic gut microbiota of these large herbivores. Ruminants have evolved a special digestive compartment, the socalled forestomach, in which symbiotic microbes produce essential enzymes that are needed to degrade plant material before it enters the true stomach (Soest 1994). It has been observed that animals coming to winter enclosures develop a reliance on food supplements, change their feeding strategies (Felton et al. 2017), and hardly feed on natural food sources (Putman and Staines 2004). Therefore, supplementary feeding in winter enclosures could cause significant shifts in the gut microbial community of herbivores that even exceed the normal range of individual variation within a population, with unknown consequences for their health.
Recent studies of the bacterial microbiota of humans and wildlife have demonstrated that a balanced host—bacteria relationship is important for host health (Carding et al. 2015, Jiménez and Sommer 2016, Thomason et al. 2017, Wasimuddin et al. 2018). In homeostasis, bacterial communities can, among many other beneficial functions, facilitate the uptake of vital nutrients from the diet, counteract infections (Jiménez and Sommer 2016, Walke and Belden 2016, Wasimuddin et al. 2017), degrade/decompose toxic plant secondary compounds (Kohl et al. 2014), and even signal the membership of a host to a certain social group via bacterial-derived odors (Leclaire et al. 2014).
In a state of dysbiosis, however, the gut microbiota can cause an increase in potential pathogens, which can have adverse effects on host health (McKenna et al. 2008, Kinross et al. 2011, Amato et al. 2013, Althani et al. 2016). The susceptibility of red deer to pathogenic bacteria could also be affected by the elevated intra-specific contact at shared feeding sites (Miller et al. 2003). For example, reintroduced red deer in Slovakia, Hungary and Poland carry zoonotic pathogenic taxa (Gnat et al. 2015). Thus, the close contact to humans at winter enclosures might also increase the likelihood of zoonosis transmission. In addition, in contrast to the vast amount of research on dietary effects on the human gut microbiota and dysbiosis-associated diseases (David et al. 2014, Althani et al. 2016), surprisingly little work has been carried out on the impact of supplementary feeding on the gut bacterial community of our most abundant large herbivores (but see: Li et al. 2017a, Gnat et al. 2018).
In this study, we used a 16S rRNA gene high-throughput sequencing approach 1) to describe the gut bacterial microbiota of red deer in the Bavarian Forest National Park, 2) to test whether the gut bacterial microbiota of red deer that spend the winter in enclosures differs from that of those that freely range in the forest, and 3) to study whether potential zoonotic pathogenic bacterial taxa occur in Bavarian red deer. An understanding of the effects of such regimes on the gut bacterial microbiota might add new but so far neglected aspects to the discussion of whether winter enclosures and supplementary feeding are good tools of red deer and forest health management.
Material and methods
Fecal sampling
The Bavarian Forest National Park (Bavaria, Germany) currently maintains four winter enclosures, namely Ahornschachten, Buchenau, Neuhüttenwiese and Riedlhäng (Fig. 1), which harbor approximately 0.86 to 4.2 red deer ha-1 during the winter months (Table 1). The supplementary food provided to red deer in these winter enclosures consists mainly of silage fodder with added apple pomace and sugar beets.
Fresh fecal samples from red deer in the four winter enclosures were collected randomly from 9 to 16 March 2017 (Ahornschachten, n = 24; Buchenau, n = 25; Neuhüttenwiese, n= 25; and Riedlhäng, n = 25). In addition, fecal samples were collected during the same period from free-ranging deer at two locations outside of the winter enclosures, namely Reschbachtal (n = 23) and Hochberg (n = 14) (Fig. 1); these sites were chosen based on information obtained from experienced game wardens.
To avoid environmental bacterial contamination, fresh samples were opened in the field with sterile equipment, and the inner part of each fecal dropping was retrieved and transferred to a cryo tube containing RNAlater to preserve the samples. Samples were then stored at —20°C at the laboratory facilities of the Bavarian Forest National Park until they were sent to the Univ. of Ulm for DNA isolation, library preparation, high-throughput sequencing, and bioinformatic analyses.
DNA extraction, library preparation and sequencing
Prior to DNA extraction, samples were pre-treated to remove excess RNAlater and to remove non-bacterial matter. Fingernail-sized portions of fecal matter were transferred to 1.5 ml Eppendorf tubes using a spatula. Ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline (PBS; 400 µl) was added to each tube, and the tubes were vortexed for 10–15 s. The samples were lightly centrifuged at 700 rpm for 2 min. The supernatants were transferred to new 1:5 ml Eppendorf tubes, taking precautions to minimize the transfer of pelleted plant material, and centrifuged again, but this time at 14 000 rpm for 10 min. The supernatants were discarded, and the remaining pellets were used as the starting material for the NucleoSpinFood kit (Macherey-Nagel, Düren, Germany), following the user manual from July 2014/Rev.11. An additional bead-beating step (ceramic beads; beating twice for 20 s) to mechanically lyse bacterial cells was incorporated between the chemical lysis of sample cells with the provided CF Buffer and the DNA-binding step. After beating, the samples were centrifuged at 11 000 rpm for 2 min, and the clear supernatants were transferred to 2 ml Eppendorf tubes. The DNA concentration in each tube was normalized to 3 ng µl-1 based on measurements with a TECAN infinite F200PRO fluorescence plate reader. The DNA library of each sample was prepared as recommended by Illumina (Miseq Reagent Kit v2 Denature and Dilute Libraries Guide, no. 15039740 v05); 7.5 pm DNA was loaded into a MiSeq flowcell with a 10% PhiX spike. Paired-end sequencing was performed over 2 × 251 cycles.
Bioinformatic analyses and statistics
Sequencing reads were pre-processed using qiime2 (ver. 2017.10) (Caporaso et al. 2010, < https://qiime2.org>) and its plugins. Specifically, we used the ‘demux’ plugin (< https://github.com/qiime2/q2-demux>) to import the demultiplexed paired-end sequencing reads and to create the ‘artifact’ file (i.e. qiime2 data format required for subsequent analyses). We applied the ‘dada2’ plugin (Callahan et al. 2016) using the default parameter settings for quality filtering and chimera filtering to trim primers (--p-trim-left-f 23, --p-trim-left-r 20), to truncate forward and reverse reads (--p-trunc-len-f 200, --p-trunc-len-r 200), and to collapse reads into representative sequences, the so-called amplicon sequence variants (ASVs). We assigned taxonomy to these ASVs using the Greengenes database (ver. 13_8) and the ‘feature-classifier’ plugin (< https://github.com/qiime2/q2-feature-classifier>) with the ‘fit-classifier-sklearn’ method and produced taxa summary bar plots (< https://github.com/qiime2/q2-taxa>) according to sample groupings.
Table 1.
Number of red deer that spent winter 2017 in the four winter enclosures of the Bavarian Forest National Park.
For diversity analyses based on bacterial phylogeny, we produced a mid-point-rooted bacterial phylogenetic tree by aligning ASVs using MAFFT (Katoh and Standley 2013) and removing non-informative positions in the alignment with the ‘mask’ command (< https://github.com/qiime2/q2-alignment>); and a phylogenetic tree was constructed with FastTree 2 (Price et al. 2010). The ‘diversity’ plugin (< https://github.com/qiime2/q2-diversity>) was used to calculate alpha-diversity (phylogenetic diversity; Faith 1992) based on 13 900 reads per red deer gut bacterial microbiota.
For further analyses and creation of figures in R (< www.r-project.org>), we exported the non-rarefied ‘feature-table’, bacterial phylogenetic tree, representative sequences, and bacterial taxonomy from qiime2 ‘artifacts’. Using the R-package ‘phyloseq’ (McMurdie and Holmes 2013), we imported the exported files (< http://biom-format.org>; McDonald et al. 2012) and added metadata information to our class object. We also exported values of phylogenetic diversity to R and tested for significant differences in phylogenetic diversity between sites and overwintering areas using a Kruskal—Wallis rank sum test. Within ‘phyloseq’, we calculated a betadiversity matrix (Bray—Curtis; Somerfield 2008) based on 13 900 reads per gut bacterial microbiota and tested whether overwintering areas (enclosure versus forest) and sampling sites differed significantly using a PERMANOVA approach with the ‘adonis’ function of the R-package ‘vegan’ (Dixon 2003). Furthermore, we tested for within and between differences of beta-diversity distances using the ‘anosim’ function of the ‘vegan’ package in R (Dixon 2003).
In addition, we applied a DESeq2 analysis to identify bacterial AS Vs whose relative abundances significantly differed between the gut microbiota of red deer in enclosures and that of free-ranging red deer (McMurdie and Holmes 2013, Love et al. 2014). Finally, we checked for potentially pathogenic bacteria in the red deer gut microbiota and specifically searched for bacterial taxa known to contain pathogens that had been detected in red deer from Slovakia, Hungary and Poland (Gnat et al. 2015) using BLAST searches (Johnson et al. 2008) of the respective AS Vs against the NCBI nucleotide database.
Data deposition
Sequencing data is available in the Dryad Digital Repository: < http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.7r22vb1> (Menke et al. 2018).
Results
Sequencing of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene in fecal samples of 99 red deer in enclosures and 37 free-ranging red deer resulted in 10 053 298 reads. After preprocessing, the remaining 6 988 136 reads (min: 13 929; median: 51 607; mean: 51 383; max: 88 217) were collapsed into 11 105 AS Vs (mean: 629.28 reads per ASV).
The gut bacterial microbiota of the red deer of both groups consisted mainly of the bacterial phyla (average proportion across all individuals >1%) Firmicutes (71.50%), Bacteroidetes (15.55%), Proteobacteria (4.90%), Actinobacteria (3.68%), and Cyanobacteria (1.21%) (Fig. 2). The gut bacterial microbiota of red deer in enclosures contained on average higher proportions of Firmicutes (W = 3039, p < 0.001) and Actinobacteria (W = 1314, p = 0.011), but particularly lower proportions of Proteobacteria (W = 1141, p < 0.001) than that of free-ranging red deer (Table 2). A summary of the best taxonomic assignments of the bacterial phyla in the feces of all individuals is presented as a table in the supplementary information (Supplementary material Appendix 1 Table A1).
Alpha-diversity, expressed as phylogenetic diversity (Faith and Baker 2007), was higher in the gut bacterial microbiota of red deer in enclosures than in that of free-ranging red deer (Kruskal—Wallis: χ2 = 6.96, p = 0.008, Fig. 3A). Phylogenetic diversity of all red deer ranged from 19.69 to 64.12 and was highest in the gut bacterial microbiota of red deer in the winter enclosures Ahornschachten (E) and Riedlhäng (E), intermediate in Reschbachtal (F) and Buchenau (E), and lowest in Neuhüttenwiese (E) and Hochberg (F) (Fig. 3B).
Red deer in enclosures and free-ranging red deer also differed in beta-diversity. An NMDS plot based on the Bray—Curtis distance matrix revealed clear separation of the two groups of red deer (PERMANOVA: F = 14.42, p = 0.001; Fig. 4A) and clustering according to sampling sites (PERMANOVA: F = 16.68, p = 0.001; Fig. 4B). The distances between the gut bacterial microbiota (within a 95% confidence interval) of red deer in Neuhüttenwiese (E) and Hochberg (F) were higher than those of all other sampling sites, and some gut bacterial microbiotas were far removed from the respective cluster centers (Fig. 4). In addition, distances between the gut bacterial microbiota of the two groups were higher than the distances within each group (ANOSIM: permutations = 999, R = 0.623, p = 0.001; Fig. 5A) and the distances were also higher within sampling sites than the distances between the sampling sites (ANOSIM: permutations = 999, R = 0.418, p = 0.001; Fig. 5B).
Table 2.
Average proportions of the main bacterial phyla (average proportion ≥ 0.5%) present in the gut bacterial microbiota of red deer in enclosures and free-ranging red deer in the Bavarian Forest National Park. The full list of phylum assignments is presented in the supplement (ST 1). Values in boldface are significant.
DESeq2 analysis revealed that the relative abundance of several AS Vs in the gut bacterial microbiota of red deer in enclosures significantly differed (p < 0.001) from that of free-ranging red deer (Fig. 6). In particular, the relative abundance of AS Vs of the genera Bacillus, Paenibacillus and Prevotella was higher in the gut of red deer in enclosures, and the relative abundance of AS Vs of the genera Akkermansia, Bacteroides and Ruminococcus were higher in the gut of freeranging red deer.
Finally, we compared AS Vs of bacterial genera that potentially contain zoonotic pathogenic bacterial species, as identified in Gnat et al. (2015), with the NCBI nucleotide database. The relative abundance of the genera Escherichia, Yersinia, Enterococcus and Staphylococcus was low (9%, 5%, 4% and 0.7%, respectively). BLAST results of AS Vs of these genera revealed hits to known pathogens in red deer (Table 3).
Discussion
This is the first study to apply high-throughput sequencing to describe the gut bacterial microbiota of wild red deer and to compare the gut bacterial microbiota of individuals that stay in winter enclosures and feed on supplementary fodder with that of individuals that remain in the forest and feed only on natural resources. In general, the gut bacterial microbiota of red deer in the Bavarian Forest National Park was similar to that of other ruminants (Donnell et al. 2017) and also other Cervidae, such as elk Cervus canadensis, whitetailed deer Odocoileus virginianus (Gruninger et al. 2014), and white-lipped deer Cervus albirostris (Li et al. 2017b), at least at the bacterial phylum level, with high proportions of the phyla Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes (Fig. 2).
Particularly the phylum Firmicutes was present in higher proportions in red deer in enclosures than in free-ranging red deer. This is in concordance with a study in Poland in which red deer that were not fed with supplementary food during winter had a lower abundance of bacteria than red deer that were fed with supplementary food (Gnat et al. 2018). Recent studies on the microbiota of silage (Duniere et al. 2017, Peng et al. 2018) have revealed that certain bacterial taxa within the Firmicutes increase during ensiling when aerobic spoilage occurs (Driehuis et al. 2018). Thus, the Firmicutes probably increased in the gut microbiota of red deer in enclosures because they fed on silage. Interestingly, the relative abundances of phyla in the gut of red deer at two sites strongly differed from those of the other sites; the feces of red deer at the winter enclosure Neuhüttenwiese had higher proportions of Actinobacteria and lower proportions of Bacteroidetes, and the feces of free-ranging red deer at Hochberg had higher proportions of Proteobacteria. Members of Actinobacteria play a central role in cellulose and lignin degradation (Le Roes-Hill et al. 2011, Zhu et al. 2011, Hanshew et al. 2015, Le win et al. 2016), which is one of the most important functions provided by bacteria to large herbivores (Fang et al. 2012). Hunters in the Hochberg area attract red deer with apple pomace, which in combination with natural food sources might have created a distinct gut bacterial microbiota profile.
We found that both sampling site and overwintering area strongly affect alpha- and beta-diversities and that the overwintering area strongly affects the bacteria present in the red deer guts at the ASV level. Alpha-diversity differed between sampling sites and was higher in the gut of red deer in enclosures than in that of free-ranging red deer (Fig. 3), the gut bacterial microbiota of the two groups of red deer separated accordingly (Fig. 4), and the bacterial AS Vs that strongly drove the observed differences between the two groups belonged to the genera Bacillus, CF231, Paenibacillus and Prevotella (more abundant in the gut of red deer in enclosures), and Akkermansia, Bacteroides and Ruminococcus (more abundant in the gut of free-ranging red deer).
Several interacting factors might be responsible for these observations. In a study of Limousin and Jinan crossbred steers, silage rich in nitrate led to an increase in the relative abundance of the bacterial taxon CF231 in the gut (Zhao et al. 2015). We did not check the nitrate level of the supplementary food in our study, but if nitrate levels were high because of incomplete reduction during ensiling or if they were higher than in natural food sources, this might have caused the observed increase of this genus in the gut of red deer in enclosures. As has been shown in studies on silage production, members of the phylum Firmicutes, especially spores of Bacillus (Duniere et al. 2017) and Paenibacillus (Tohno et al. 2016), can increase in silage production during aerobic spoilage (Borreani et al. 2013). As red deer in enclosures fed almost exclusively on supplementary food, they probably ingested large amounts of spores of these bacteria, which we then detected in red deer feces. Spores of toxin-producing species of these genera present a huge problem in dairy milk production because of their ability to survive pasteurization and subsequent germination in the product (Gopal et al. 2015). However, in animals, spores usually only pass through the digestive system of the host and, to the best of our knowledge, do not affect host health (Driehuis and Elferink 2000).
Moreover, the proportion of Ruminococcus was higher in free-ranging red deer than in red deer in enclosures. Species of the genus Ruminococcus are important for the degradation and fermentation of dietary polysaccharides in ruminants (Julliand et al. 1999, La Reau et al. 2016) and require fermentable carbohydrates for growth (Rainey 2009). Fermentation during silage production might have led to a food source that is lower in fermentable carbohydrates compared to fresh food sources. The higher relative abundance of Akkermansia in the gut of free-ranging red deer is in contrast to results of a study on musk deer Moschus berezovskii in which the gut of captive individuals had a higher relative abundance of this bacterial genus than that of free-ranging deer (Li et al. 2017a). Nevertheless, the differences in the gut bacterial microbiota of red deer between the overwintering areas in our study were less pronounced than the differences identified in studies that compared wild and captive forest musk deer (Li et al. 2017a) and wild and captive sika deer Cervus nippon hortulorum (Guan et al. 2017). Thus, the difference in the gut bacterial microbiota among sampling sites is driven by a combination of local factors, such as small-scale differences in food composition within enclosures (e.g. differences in silage quality) and in the forest area from which the animals were derived. Such local factors seem to lead to a variation between sampling sites without removing the features that lead to differences in the gut bacterial microbiota of red deer in enclosures and free-ranging red deer. The differences in the gut bacterial microbiota of red deer of forest sites might partly be attributable to the higher variation in local food sources from which free-ranging red deer can select (Krojerová- Prokešová et al. 2010). Data from GPS-collared red deer (unpublished data of the Bavarian Forest National Park) indicate that red deer usually return to the same winter enclosures. Therefore, one can reasonably assume that individuals that visit the same winter enclosures also forage in the same forest areas during the rest of the year. This would lead to higher similarities of their gut bacterial microbiota and further impact the distinctiveness of their gut bacterial microbiota between sampling sites because of a spatial differentiation in diet composition (Krojerová- Prokešová et al. 2010)
Table 3.
NCBI BLAST results (only the first result is shown) of AS Vs of bacterial genera that contain pathogenic bacterial species (Gnat et al. 2015) in the guts of red deer.
We identified four potentially pathogenic bacterial genera in red deer (Escherichia, Yersini, Enterococus, Staphylococcus), in contrast to the 12 taxa that were detected in red deer from Slovakia, Hungary and Poland (Gnat et al. 2015). The low numbers of reads and low relative abundance of the genera in our study suggests that red deer in the Bavarian Forest National Park are relatively healthy and rarely maintain bacterial zoonotic pathogens. Escherichia coli was more prevalent in the gut of red deer in enclosures than in the gut of free-ranging red deer, possibly because of interactions with humans in the enclosures. However, short fragments of the 16S rRNA gene, as used in this study, have their limitations in identifying bacterial zoonotic pathogens and other bacterial species with certainty. Thus, whether these E. coli strains are enterohemorragic seropathotypes (EHEC) needs further investigation.
In conclusion, our results revealed differences in the alpha- and beta-diversities of the gut bacterial microbiota of red deer in winter enclosures and free-ranging red deer. The strong difference in the relative abundance of members of the Firmicutes between the two groups of red deer is likely caused by the consumption of silage in enclosures. The guts of both groups of red deer carried known red deer pathogens, but their relative abundances were low, which suggests that red deer of the Bavarian Forest National Park represent a healthy population. Future studies should investigate the bacterial communities present in the supplementary food and apply metagenomics or transcriptomics on the red deer gut bacterial microbiota to reveal the impact of overwintering area at the level of bacterial functions. In addition, the pathogenicity of potentially pathogenic bacteria should be examined to identify their zoonotic potential.
Acknowledgements
We thank Johannes Jakob, Matthias Haunstetter and Jonas Trummer for collecting red deer fecal samples in the Bavarian Forest National Park. We thank Ulrike Stehle and Sara Buchholz for laboratory work, and Teresa Jones for proof-reading. We are especially grateful to the staff of the Bavarian Forest National Park administration for their support. We thank Karen A. Brune for linguistic revision of the manuscript.
Author contributions – Conceived and designed the experiment: MHeu, SM and SS. Field logistics and sample collection: MHeu, MHen. Laboratory analyses: KW. Analyzed the data and wrote the manuscript: SM. Critically revised the manuscript: SS, MHeu, MHen and KW.
Conflict of interest – The authors declare no conflict of interest
References
Appendices
Supplementary material (aavailabel online as Appendix wlb-00503 at < www.wildlifebiology.org/appendix/wlb00503>). Appendix 1