利用时间地理方法分析老虎的互动和家园范围的变化

IF 3.4 1区 生物学 Q2 ECOLOGY Movement Ecology Pub Date : 2024-02-03 DOI:10.1186/s40462-024-00454-0
Yifei Liu, Somayeh Dodge, Achara Simcharoen, Sean C. Ahearn, James L. D. Smith
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引用次数: 0

摘要

通过运动进行的互动可作为一种标记,用于理解和模拟种间和种内物种动态,以及共享同一空间的动物的集体行为。本研究利用人类运动研究中常用的时间地理框架来探索泰国西部森林复合体(WEFCOM)中印度支那虎(Panthera tigris corbeti)之间的动态互动模式。我们提出并评估了一种时间-地理互动分析方法 ORTEGA,以追踪老虎之间的时空互动模式和家园范围转移。利用多年来收集的 WEFCOM 中老虎的独特 GPS 跟踪数据,研究了老虎的并发和延迟互动模式。比较了不同性别、不同关系和不同生命阶段老虎种内互动的结果。此外,还将 ORTEGA 的性能与常用的基于近距离的方法进行了比较。在 67 只被跟踪的老虎中,有 42 只在共享边界上同时出现了互动。对家园范围重叠的五只老虎(两只成年雌虎、一只雄虎和两只幼年雄虎)的进一步调查表明,母虎和两只幼虎在散居前大多呆在一起,但散居后互动较少。雄虎与母虎的相遇次数增多,而幼虎的活动范围则发生了变化。在另一条时间线上,邻近的雌虎大多会避开母虎。通过这些家园范围动态和互动模式,我们确定了这些老虎之间的四种互动类型:跟随、相遇、潜伏和回避。与基于邻近度的方法相比,ORTEGA 更好地检测到了母虎与幼虎在预分散期间同时进行的互动,而基于邻近度的方法则遗漏了许多双组间的互动。在空间缓冲区和时间窗口较大的情况下,基于邻近性的方法能检测到更多的母婴互动,但可能会高估互动的持续时间。这项研究证明了 ORTEGA 作为一种基于时间地理的动物运动互动分析方法的适用性和优点。我们展示了时间地理学可以为动物行为和互动提供有价值的、数据驱动的见解。ORTEGA 可有效追踪动物之间频繁相遇和时间延迟的互动,而无需依赖特定的空间和时间缓冲区。未来的研究应整合环境和行为信息,以更好地识别和描述物种互动的性质。
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Analyzing tiger interaction and home range shifts using a time-geographic approach
Interaction through movement can be used as a marker to understand and model interspecific and intraspecific species dynamics, and the collective behavior of animals sharing the same space. This research leverages the time-geography framework, commonly used in human movement research, to explore the dynamic patterns of interaction between Indochinese tigers (Panthera tigris corbeti) in the western forest complex (WEFCOM) in Thailand. We propose and assess ORTEGA, a time-geographic interaction analysis method, to trace spatio-temporal interactions patterns and home range shifts among tigers. Using unique GPS tracking data of tigers in WEFCOM collected over multiple years, concurrent and delayed interaction patterns of tigers are investigated. The outcomes are compared for intraspecific tiger interaction across different genders, relationships, and life stages. Additionally, the performance of ORTEGA is compared to a commonly used proximity-based approach. Among the 67 tracked tigers, 42 show concurrent interactions at shared boundaries. Further investigation of five tigers with overlapping home ranges (two adult females, a male, and two young male tigers) suggests that the mother tiger and her two young mostly stay together before their dispersal but interact less post-dispersal. The male tiger increases encounters with the mother tiger while her young shift their home ranges. On another timeline, the neighbor female tiger mostly avoids the mother tiger. Through these home range dynamics and interaction patterns, we identify four types of interaction among these tigers: following, encounter, latency, and avoidance. Compared to the proximity-based approach, ORTEGA demonstrates better detects concurrent mother–young interactions during pre-dispersal, while the proximity-based approach misses many interactions among the dyads. With larger spatial buffers and temporal windows, the proximity-based approach detects more encounters but may overestimate the duration of interaction. This research demonstrates the applicability and merits of ORTEGA as a time-geographic based approach to animal movement interaction analysis. We show time geography can develop valuable, data-driven insights about animal behavior and interactions. ORTEGA effectively traces frequent encounters and temporally delayed interactions between animals, without relying on specific spatial and temporal buffers. Future research should integrate contextual and behavioral information to better identify and characterize the nature of species interaction.
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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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