Gable, Thomas DJohnson-Bice, Sean MHomkes, Austin TFieberg, John RBump, Joseph K2023-04-122023-04-122023-04-12https://hdl.handle.net/11299/253695Dataset for Gable et al. 2023 where the authors describe how wolves indirectly alter the trajectory of forests by constraining the distance that beavers, a central place forager and prolific ecosystem engineer, forage from water. Specifically, Gable et al. demonstrate wolves wait-in-ambush and kill beavers on longer feeding trails than would be expected based on the spatiotemporal availability of beavers. This pattern is driven by temporal dynamics of beaver foraging: beavers make more foraging trips and spend more time on land per trip on longer feeding trails that extend farther from water. As a result, beavers are more vulnerable on longer feeding trails than shorter ones. Wolf predation appears to be a selective evolutionary pressure propelled by consumptive and non-consumptive mechanisms that constrain the distance from water beavers forage, which in turn limits the area of forest around wetlands, lakes, and rivers beavers alter through foraging. Thus, wolves appear intricately linked to boreal forest dynamics by shaping beaver foraging behavior, a form of natural disturbance that alters the successional and ecological states of forests.CC0 1.0 Universalhttp://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/Data for: Wolves alter the trajectory of forests by shaping the central-place foraging behavior of an ecosystem engineerDatasethttps://doi.org/10.13020/vzn6-g462