洞察世界上最古老的狗的空间生态:新几内亚恐鸟的高海拔运动

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Benjamin L. Allen , Chloe Miller , Lisa Wolf , Hendra K. Maury , Leonardo A. Numberi , Suriani Surbakti , Berna Natalia Br Silaban , Kukuh Indra Kusuma , James K. McIntyre
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引用次数: 0

摘要

了解动物的活动模式、家园范围大小和空间利用情况是了解其基本生态学的基础,而获取空间数据是新发现物种、缺乏数据的受保护物种或具有重大科学或公众利益的物种的重要研究重点。在此,我们报告了首次从新几内亚蓬扎克贾亚附近的野生恐鸟那里获得的空间数据。根据2018年至2022年期间用GPS追踪项圈监测到的四只野狗的信息,我们报告说,野狗的家园范围可达128平方公里,野狗每天最多可旅行56.8公里,它们利用海拔4630米以下的雨林和高山栖息地。该地点的恐鸟经常穿越陡峭、多岩石和贫瘠的高山裂缝,前往另一侧海拔较低的肥沃地区。这些结果表明,新几内亚恐狼可能具有生理和遗传适应能力,能够在高海拔低氧环境中生活,类似于喜马拉雅狼、埃塞俄比亚狼和其他在高海拔地区发现的犬科动物。作为第一种被驯化的动物和世界上最古老的狗,考虑到它们在历史上和现在的文化意义、它们在野外的不确定性,以及它们作为世界第二大岛屿上最大的陆地食肉动物的营养地位,我们相信,对新几内亚恐鸟生态学的进一步研究将继续揭示出对我们了解这一全球生物多样性热点地区的人类和动物生态学有价值的重要见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Insights into the spatial ecology of the world’s most ancient dog: High-altitude movements of New Guinea dingoes
Knowledge of an animal’s activity patterns, home range size and space use is fundamental to understanding their basic ecology, and obtaining spatial data is an important research priority for newly discovered species, data-deficient species of conservation concern, or species of great scientific or public interest. Here we report the first spatial data obtained from wild-living dingoes near Puncak Jaya, New Guinea. Based on information from four dingoes monitored with GPS tracking collars between 2018 and 2022, we report that dingo home range sizes can be up to 128 km2, dingoes travel up to 56.8 km per day, and they utilise rainforest and alpine habitats up to 4630 m above sea level. Dingoes at the site regularly traversed steep, rocky and barren alpine mountain crevasses to access more fertile areas at lower altitudes on the other side. These results imply that New Guinea dingoes may have physiological and genetic adaptations that enable them to live in high-altitude low-oxygen environments similar to Himalayan wolves, Ethiopian wolves, and other canids found in high-altitude areas. As the first domesticated animal and the world’s most ancient dog, and given their historic and current cultural significance, their illusiveness in the wild, and their trophic position as the largest terrestrial predators on the second-largest island in the world, we believe that further research on the ecology of New Guinea dingoes will continue to reveal important insights valuable for our understanding of human and animal ecology in this global biodiversity hotspot.
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CiteScore
7.20
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4.30%
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