Using long-term ranging patterns to assess within-group and between-group competition in wild mountain gorillas.

IF 2.2 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences BMC Ecology Pub Date : 2020-07-16 DOI:10.1186/s12898-020-00306-6
Nicole Seiler, Martha M Robbins
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Background: Competition within and between social groups determines access to resources and can be inferred from space use parameters that reflect depletion of food resources and competitive abilities of groups. Using location data from 1998 to 2017, we investigated within- and between-group competition in 12 groups of wild mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei). As within-group feeding competition is expected to increase with group size, an increase in group size is predicted to lead to an increase in the size of annual home ranges and core areas, but to a decrease in fidelity (reuse of an area). Due to asymmetries in competitive abilities, larger groups are expected to have higher exclusivity (degree of non-shared space) of annual home ranges and core areas than smaller groups.

Results: We found evidence of within-group feeding competition based on a positive relationship between group size and both annual home range and core area size as well as a negative relationship between group size and core area fidelity. Additionally, fidelity of core areas was lower than of home ranges. Between-group competition was inferred from a trend for groups with more members and more males to have more exclusive home ranges and core areas. Lastly, annual core areas were largely mutually exclusive.

Conclusions: Our study suggests that non-territorial, group-living animals can have highly dynamic, long-term avoidance-based spacing patterns, both temporally and spatially, to maintain annual core area exclusivity among groups while concurrently shifting these areas annually within overlapping home ranges to avoid resource depletion. Despite ranging in larger home ranges and core areas, larger groups were able to maintain more exclusive ranges than smaller groups, suggesting a competitive advantage for larger groups in between-group competition in a non-territorial species. Together, these findings contribute to understanding how social animals make behavioral adjustments to mitigate the effects of intraspecific competition.

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利用长期范围模式评估野生山地大猩猩群内和群间竞争。
背景:社会群体内部和之间的竞争决定了对资源的获取,这可以从反映食物资源枯竭和群体竞争能力的空间使用参数中推断出来。利用1998 ~ 2017年的地理位置数据,对12个野生山地大猩猩(Gorilla beringei beringei)群体内和群体间的竞争情况进行了研究。由于群体内的喂养竞争预计会随着群体规模的增加而增加,预计群体规模的增加会导致年度家庭范围和核心区域的规模增加,但会导致保真度(一个区域的重复使用)的降低。由于竞争能力的不对称,较大的集团对年度家庭范围和核心区域的排他性(非共享空间的程度)预计高于较小的集团。结果:我们发现了基于群体规模与年活动范围和核心区大小之间的正相关关系以及群体规模与核心区保真度之间的负相关关系的群体内喂养竞争的证据。此外,核心区的保真度低于家庭范围。群体之间的竞争是由这样一种趋势推断出来的,即成员更多、男性更多的群体拥有更多专属的家庭范围和核心区域。最后,年度核心区基本上是相互排斥的。结论:我们的研究表明,群居动物可以在时间和空间上具有高度动态的、长期的基于回避的空间模式,以保持群体之间的年度核心区域排他性,同时每年在重叠的家庭范围内转移这些区域,以避免资源枯竭。尽管在更大的家园范围和核心区域活动,较大的群体能够比较小的群体保持更多的排他性范围,这表明在非领土物种的群体间竞争中,较大的群体具有竞争优势。总之,这些发现有助于理解社会性动物如何通过行为调整来减轻种内竞争的影响。
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来源期刊
BMC Ecology
BMC Ecology ECOLOGY-
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
4.50%
发文量
0
审稿时长
22 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Ecology is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on environmental, behavioral and population ecology as well as biodiversity of plants, animals and microbes.
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