| Literature DB >> 29318021 |
Duarte S Viana1,2, José Enrique Granados3, Paulino Fandos4, Jesús M Pérez5, Francisco Javier Cano-Manuel3, Daniel Burón4, Guillermo Fandos6, María Ángeles Párraga Aguado7, Jordi Figuerola1, Ramón C Soriguer1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Space use by animals is determined by the interplay between movement and the environment, and is thus mediated by habitat selection, biotic interactions and intrinsic factors of moving individuals. These processes ultimately determine home range size, but their relative contributions and dynamic nature remain less explored. We investigated the role of habitat selection, movement unrelated to habitat selection and intrinsic factors related to sex in driving space use and home range size in Iberian ibex, Capra pyrenaica. We used GPS collars to track ibex across the year in two different geographical areas of Sierra Nevada, Spain, and measured habitat variables related to forage and roost availability.Entities:
Keywords: Animal movement; Home range; Ibex; Integrated step selection analysis; Resource selection; Satellite-tracking
Year: 2018 PMID: 29318021 PMCID: PMC5755340 DOI: 10.1186/s40462-017-0119-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mov Ecol ISSN: 2051-3933 Impact factor: 3.600
Fig. 1Altitude of tracked ibexes across the year for the western (a) and eastern (b) population nuclei, as well as seasonal variation of primary productivity (NDVI) at different altitudes in the western (c) and eastern (d) nuclei
Fig. 2Relative selection strength (log-transformed RSS) for selecting location x1 over x2 (habitat value in x2 = 50%). The multiple panels correspond to all the combinations between season (rows) and habitat variable (columns). Continuous and dashed lines correspond to females and males, respectively; and dark and light lines correspond to the west and east nucleus, respectively. Note that only the mean RSS is shown to improve interpretation – see Additional file 1: Figure S2 for the figure with associated 95% confidence intervals
Fig. 3Boxplots of selection coefficients from the iSSA models pooled across seasons, sexes and population nuclei
Fig. 4Difference between observed and estimated mean step-length pooled across seasons, sexes and population nuclei. Zero value represents the situation in which habitat selection does not influence movement behaviour and in turn space use
Coefficients of the best home range size models (linear mixed models), for both the 90% and 50% contours. The AICc corresponds to a model in which the target group of predictors was removed, thus being a measure of its explanatory importance. NS, predictor not selected
| HR-90% | HR-50% | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Term | Estimate | S.E. | AICc | Estimate | S.E. | AICc |
| Intercept | −0.086 | 0.294 | −0.269 | 0.241 | ||
| Season | 90.141 | 58.017 | ||||
| Spring | −0.236 | 0.115 | −0.200 | 0.082 | ||
| Summer | −0.402 | 0.121 | −0.438 | 0.082 | ||
| Winter | −0.476 | 0.110 | −0.461 | 0.079 | ||
| Sex | 100.294 | 55.974 | ||||
| Male | 0.740 | 0.123 | 0.582 | 0.097 | ||
| Nucleus | NS | 38.772 | ||||
| East | NS | NS | −0.281 | 0.109 | ||
| Selection-free movement | 129.895 | 69.538 | ||||
| Step-length | 0.002 | 0.000 | 0.002 | 0.000 | ||
| Turn-angle | 1.266 | 0.246 | 0.488 | 0.240 | ||
| Selection strength | 101.627 | 44.634 | ||||
| Slope | 0.827 | 0.194 | 0.504 | 0.141 | ||
| Slope2 | 2.306 | 0.544 | 1.261 | 0.422 | ||
| Heat-load2 | 1.645 | 0.373 | 0.780 | 0.273 | ||
| Resource availability | 89.837 | 39.586 | ||||
| Heat load (CV) | 4.252 | 1.637 | 4.070 | 1.390 | ||
| NDVI (CV) | 0.457 | 0.163 | NS | NS | ||
Fig. 5Home range size (90% contours) for the different combinations of season, sex and population nucleus