矿区中一种濒危中型食肉动物的运动生态学

IF 3.4 1区 生物学 Q2 ECOLOGY Movement Ecology Pub Date : 2024-01-17 DOI:10.1186/s40462-023-00439-5
M. A. Cowan, J. A. Dunlop, L. A. Gibson, H. A. Moore, S. A. Setterfield, D. G. Nimmo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

高效的运动和能量消耗对动物的生存至关重要。由于资源可用性和威胁的变化,人类干扰会改变动物的行动。一些动物可以利用人为干扰提高移动效率,而另一些动物则由于高资源栖息地的破碎化以及与受干扰栖息地相关的风险而面临移动受限或移动效率低下的问题。采矿是一种主要的人为干扰,它清除了自然栖息地,引入了新的景观特征,并改变了景观中的资源分布。本研究调查了采矿对一种濒危中型食肉动物--北豚鼠(Dasyurus hallucatus)--活动的影响。我们使用 GPS 项圈和加速度计调查了它们在活跃采矿景观中的栖息地选择和能量消耗情况,以确定这种干扰对北冠羚的影响。我们在西澳大利亚皮尔巴拉地区一个活跃矿区的繁殖期和非繁殖期为北狐安装了全球定位系统项圈和加速度计。我们利用 95% 等距的利用率分布计算了北冠鹦鹉的活动范围,从而对大尺度活动进行了调查,并将观察到的活动范围内的栖息地类型和环境特征与现有景观进行了比较。我们利用综合阶跃选择功能调查了石鸮的精细移动范围,评估了每个栖息地协变量的相对选择强度。最后,我们使用片断结构方程模型分析了各栖息地协变量对北狐能量消耗的影响。在大尺度上,北冠鼠主要利用崎岖的岩石栖息地,并根据其可用性的比例利用采矿栖息地。然而,在精细尺度上,栖息地的使用在繁殖季节和非繁殖季节有所不同。在繁殖季节,北部疣鼻鸊鷉明显避开采矿栖息地,而在非繁殖季节,北部疣鼻鸊鷉经常光顾采矿栖息地,与光顾岩石栖息地和河岸栖息地的频率相当,尽管需要付出更高的能量代价。采矿对北石鸡的影响是使其喜爱的岩石栖息地支离破碎,增加能量消耗,并可能影响其繁殖扩散。虽然采矿栖息地在非繁殖季节提供的资源机会可能有限,但在采矿活动期间开展保护工作,包括建立活动走廊和逐步恢复栖息地,可能会有所帮助。然而,优先保护采矿地貌中的天然岩石和河岸栖息地对保护北冠羚至关重要。
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Movement ecology of an endangered mesopredator in a mining landscape
Efficient movement and energy expenditure are vital for animal survival. Human disturbance can alter animal movement due to changes in resource availability and threats. Some animals can exploit anthropogenic disturbances for more efficient movement, while others face restricted or inefficient movement due to fragmentation of high-resource habitats, and risks associated with disturbed habitats. Mining, a major anthropogenic disturbance, removes natural habitats, introduces new landscape features, and alters resource distribution in the landscape. This study investigates the effect of mining on the movement of an endangered mesopredator, the northern quoll (Dasyurus hallucatus). Using GPS collars and accelerometers, we investigate their habitat selection and energy expenditure in an active mining landscape, to determine the effects of this disturbance on northern quolls. We fit northern quolls with GPS collars and accelerometers during breeding and non-breeding season at an active mine site in the Pilbara region of Western Australia. We investigated broad-scale movement by calculating the movement ranges of quolls using utilisation distributions at the 95% isopleth, and compared habitat types and environmental characteristics within observed movement ranges to the available landscape. We investigated fine-scale movement by quolls with integrated step selection functions, assessing the relative selection strength for each habitat covariate. Finally, we used piecewise structural equation modelling to analyse the influence of each habitat covariate on northern quoll energy expenditure. At the broad scale, northern quolls predominantly used rugged, rocky habitats, and used mining habitats in proportion to their availability. However, at the fine scale, habitat use varied between breeding and non-breeding seasons. During the breeding season, quolls notably avoided mining habitats, whereas in the non-breeding season, they frequented mining habitats equally to rocky and riparian habitats, albeit at a higher energetic cost. Mining impacts northern quolls by fragmenting favoured rocky habitats, increasing energy expenditure, and potentially impacting breeding dispersal. While mining habitats might offer limited resource opportunities in the non-breeding season, conservation efforts during active mining, including the creation of movement corridors and progressive habitat restoration would likely be useful. However, prioritising the preservation of natural rocky and riparian habitats in mining landscapes is vital for northern quoll conservation.
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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.
期刊最新文献
How do red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) explore their environment? Characteristics of movement patterns in time and space. North American avian species that migrate in flocks show greater long-term non-breeding range shift rates. Seasonal coastal residency and large-scale migration of two grey mullet species in temperate European waters. The influence of thermal and hypoxia induced habitat compression on walleye (Sander vitreus) movements in a temperate lake. Density-dependent distributions of hosts and parasitoids resulting from density-independent dispersal rules: implications for host-parasitoid interactions and population dynamics.
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