哈德逊河下游流域濒危木龟的运动生态学

Jason S Hagani, Suzanne K. Macey, J. D. Foley, Chad L Seewagen
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要由于研究动物样本量小、研究周期短或物种地理范围的不完整,许多海龟物种的空间生态知识缺乏或受到限制,所有这些都可能给基于科学的管理和保护带来障碍。木龟(Glyptemys insculpta)是一种正在衰退的北美淡水龟,现在在美国的几个州和加拿大的几个省被列为受威胁或濒危物种。为了更有效地管理和监管保护,需要了解当地尺度的木龟运动模式和栖息地大小,但该物种的空间生态在其大部分范围内仍未被描述。我们在纽约和康涅狄格边界的一个溪流系统中对31只木龟进行了1-5年的无线电跟踪,以描述它们的运动行为,并为这个以前未研究过的地区的管理工作提供信息。每年和多年95%最小凸多边形家园范围大小平均分别为2.8(±3.79 SD) ha和5.2(±7.36 SD) ha。雄性的年度和多年的家庭范围明显大于雌性,通常是雌性的几倍。一年至下一年的家庭范围重叠范围为10.5%至99.7%,平均为62.6%(±22.86% SD)。所有个体的家庭范围质心每年移动3.8-328.1 m (x′= 70.3±80.31 m SD),平均距离河流41.2 m(±40.56 m SD),距离最近的道路138.4 m(±70.66 m SD)。在我们的研究区域,大多数海龟的活动范围跨越了一条或两条主要道路,这说明了车辆碰撞死亡率对该种群生存能力的威胁。冬眠地的保真度很低,只有15%的海龟在与前一年相同的地点冬眠。我们的研究结果表明,康涅狄格州西部和纽约邻近地区的木龟管理工作应该考虑到雄性(分布范围更广的性别)在一个年周期内平均使用5.3公顷的资源来满足它们的资源需求,应该保护溪流周围至少116米的缓冲区,远离道路的栖息地应该优先保护。只要在被占用的木龟栖息地附近有道路,就应采取措施,促进道路下的安全通行。
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Movement Ecology of the Imperiled Wood Turtle (Glyptemys insculpta) in a Lower Hudson River Watershed
Abstract. Knowledge of the spatial ecology of many turtle species is lacking or limited by small sample sizes of study animals, short study periods, or incomplete representation of the species' geographic range, all of which can present barriers to science-based management and conservation. The wood turtle (Glyptemys insculpta) is a declining North American freshwater turtle that is now listed as threatened or endangered in several US states and Canadian provinces. Local-scale knowledge of wood turtle movement patterns and home range sizes is needed for more effective management and regulatory protection, yet the spatial ecology of this species remains undescribed in large portions of its range. We radiotracked 31 wood turtles for 1–5 yrs each in a stream system along the border of New York and Connecticut to describe their movement behavior and inform management efforts in this previously unstudied region. Annual and multiyear 95% minimum convex polygon home range sizes averaged 2.8 (± 3.79 SD) ha and 5.2 (± 7.36 SD) ha, respectively. Males had significantly larger annual and multiyear home ranges than did females, often by severalfold. Overlap of home ranges from one year to the next ranged from 10.5% to 99.7% and averaged 62.6% (± 22.86% SD). Home range centroids shifted 3.8–328.1 m (x̄ = 70.3 ± 80.31 m SD) from year to year and averaged 41.2 m (± 40.56 m SD) from the stream and 138.4 m (± 70.66 m SD) from the nearest road across all individuals. Most turtles' home ranges spanned one or both of the major roads in our study area, illuminating the threat of vehicle collision mortality to the viability of this population. Hibernaculum fidelity was low, with only 15% of turtles hibernating in the same location as in the previous year. Our results suggest that management efforts for wood turtles in western Connecticut and the adjacent region of New York should consider that males (the wider-ranging sex) use an average of 5.3 ha to meet their resource requirements over the course of one annual cycle, buffers of at least 116 m surrounding streams should be protected, habitats that are distant from roads should be prioritized for conservation, and measures that facilitate safe passage beneath roads should be implemented whenever roads are present near occupied wood turtle habitat.
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