不同体型同域鹿种温度介导的栖息地选择:热覆盖和饲料可得性是潜在的驱动因素。

IF 3.9 1区 生物学 Q2 ECOLOGY
Anna Widén, Joris P G M Cromsigt, Annika M Felton, Fredrik Widemo, Lukas Graf, Göran Ericsson, Navinder J Singh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

关于栖息地选择的知识对于有蹄类动物的管理和保护是至关重要的,以处理竞争性的土地使用。耐热性和食物获取是生境选择的两个重要驱动因素。因此,当温度升高时,进入热避难所可能会导致能量摄入减少,例如,成熟的森林通过高树冠覆盖提供热避难所,但比更开放的栖息地的饲料量更少。体型影响热敏感性,体型较大的动物更敏感。在这项研究中,我们研究了瑞典春夏季环境温度对三种不同大小的同域鹿种(驼鹿、马鹿和狍子)栖息地选择的影响。我们还评估了热遮蔽和饲料可用性之间的权衡。我们使用了gps项圈动物的数据,结合土地覆盖和机载激光雷达数据,量化了冠层覆盖作为热避难所的代表,灌木覆盖作为饲料可用性的代表。我们发现温度对三种鹿的生境选择都有影响,但影响模式不同。在白天温度较暖的时候,驼鹿和马鹿会选择有更多树冠覆盖的地区作为热避难所,然而在较暖的夜晚则表现出相反的模式,这表明它们的体温调节行为模式。然而,与驼鹿和马鹿相比,在较冷的温度下,狍对冠层覆盖度高的地区的选择更强烈,即表现出对比的模式,这表明随着温度的升高,冠层覆盖度对狍的重要性可能相对较低。这三种鹿都选择在温暖的温度下被灌木覆盖,这可以为较小的鹿提供高饲料利用率和遮荫的床地。研究结果表明,随着温度的升高,冠层覆盖和灌木覆盖的生境似乎很重要,但其重要性因物种而异。此外,我们的研究强调了同域有蹄类物种栖息地选择、食物摄入和捕食风险背后的复杂性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Temperature mediated habitat selection in sympatric deer species with varying body size: thermal cover and forage availability as potential drivers.

Temperature mediated habitat selection in sympatric deer species with varying body size: thermal cover and forage availability as potential drivers.

Temperature mediated habitat selection in sympatric deer species with varying body size: thermal cover and forage availability as potential drivers.

Temperature mediated habitat selection in sympatric deer species with varying body size: thermal cover and forage availability as potential drivers.

Knowledge about habitat selection is crucial for ungulate management and conservation to handle competing land use. Thermal tolerance and access to food are two important drivers of habitat selection. Thus, moving into thermal shelter when temperatures increase may result in reduced energy intake e.g. mature forests providing thermal shelters through high canopy cover, but lower amounts of forage than more open habitats. Body size affects heat sensitivity, with larger animals being more sensitive. In this study, we investigated ambient temperature mediated habitat selection in three differently-sized, sympatric, deer species (moose, red deer and roe deer) during spring and summer in Sweden. We also assessed the trade-off between thermal shelter and forage availability. We used data from GPS-collared animals with a combination of land cover and airborne LIDAR data to quantify canopy cover as a proxy for thermal refuge and shrub cover as a proxy for forage availability. We found that temperature influenced habitat selection in all three deer species however with divergent patterns. During warmer daily temperatures, moose and red deer selected areas with more canopy cover for thermal shelter, however showing opposite patterns during warmer nights, suggesting patterns of thermoregulatory behaviour. Roe deer showed no influence of high temperatures on canopy cover selection however,, selected more strongly for areas with high canopy cover during colder temperatures i.e. showing contrasting patterns compared to moose and red deer, suggesting that canopy cover may be relatively less important for roe deer as temperature increase. All three species selected for shrub cover during warmer temperatures, which can provide both high forage availability and shade over bed sites for smaller deer species. Our findings indicate that canopy cover and shrub cover habitats appear to be important as temperatures increase, but their significance varies among species. Furthermore, our study highlights the complexity behind habitat selection in sympatric ungulate species, food intake and predation risk.

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来源期刊
Movement Ecology
Movement Ecology Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
4.90%
发文量
47
审稿时长
23 weeks
期刊介绍: Movement Ecology is an open-access interdisciplinary journal publishing novel insights from empirical and theoretical approaches into the ecology of movement of the whole organism - either animals, plants or microorganisms - as the central theme. We welcome manuscripts on any taxa and any movement phenomena (e.g. foraging, dispersal and seasonal migration) addressing important research questions on the patterns, mechanisms, causes and consequences of organismal movement. Manuscripts will be rigorously peer-reviewed to ensure novelty and high quality.
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