| Literature DB >> 30585402 |
Florian Kletty1, Mathilde Tissier1,2, Charlotte Kourkgy2, Fabrice Capber3, Alexandre Zahariev1, Nicolas Chatelain1, Julien Courtecuisse1, Yvon LE Maho1, Caroline Habold1.
Abstract
Agriculture intensification, marked by the generalization of crop monoculture, by the increase in plot size and by the reduction of plant diversity, has led to huge decline in wildlife in European farmlands. In such habitat, research has long been biased towards birds and invertebrates, while very few studies have investigated the effect on small mammals. Considering the European hamster, Cricetus cricetus, we therefore review the different techniques that can be used to investigate the impact of environmental changes and conservation measures in small and endangered wild mammals. We suggest that only a multidisciplinary approach will allow exploration of these effects, combining experimental laboratory work on captive-bred animals with the monitoring of wild individuals. In particular, individual energy balance has to be investigated and measured as accurately as possible, through either biochemical or bio-logging techniques. It is, indeed, the most affected physiological trait in a changing environment, as it determines both the reproductive output and the survival of the individual. We also discuss the inconvenience of capture-release approaches for such an endangered species and emphasize the disturbance that experimental protocols could impose on the hamster.Entities:
Keywords: conservation measures; data loggers; degree of invasiveness; energy balance; metabolism
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30585402 DOI: 10.1111/1749-4877.12375
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Integr Zool ISSN: 1749-4869 Impact factor: 2.654