Spiegel Orr, Leu Stephan T, Sih Andrew, Godfrey Stephanie S, Bull C Michael
Department of Environmental Science and Policy, University of California, Davis, CA, USA
School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Proc Biol Sci. 2015 Nov 22;282(1819). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2015.1768.
Understanding space use remains a major challenge for animal ecology, with implications for species interactions, disease spread, and conservation. Behavioural type (BT) may shape the space use of individuals within animal populations. Bolder or more aggressive individuals tend to be more exploratory and disperse further. Yet, to date we have limited knowledge on how space use other than dispersal depends on BT. To address this question we studied BT-dependent space-use patterns of sleepy lizards (Tiliqua rugosa) in southern Australia. We combined high-resolution global positioning system (GPS) tracking of 72 free-ranging lizards with repeated behavioural assays, and with a survey of the spatial distributions of their food and refuge resources. Bayesian generalized linear mixed models (GLMM) showed that lizards responded to the spatial distribution of resources at the neighbourhood scale and to the intensity of space use by other conspecifics (showing apparent conspecific avoidance). BT (especially aggressiveness) affected space use by lizards and their response to ecological and social factors, in a seasonally dependent manner. Many of these effects and interactions were stronger later in the season when food became scarce and environmental conditions got tougher. For example, refuge and food availability became more important later in the season and unaggressive lizards were more responsive to these predictors. These findings highlight a commonly overlooked source of heterogeneity in animal space use and improve our mechanistic understanding of processes leading to behaviourally driven disease dynamics and social structure.
理解动物的空间利用情况仍然是动物生态学面临的一项重大挑战,这对物种间相互作用、疾病传播和保护工作都有影响。行为类型(BT)可能会塑造动物种群中个体的空间利用方式。胆子更大或更具攻击性的个体往往更具探索性,活动范围也更广。然而,迄今为止,我们对于除扩散之外的空间利用如何依赖于行为类型的了解还很有限。为了解决这个问题,我们研究了澳大利亚南部睡眠蜥蜴(Tiliqua rugosa)依赖行为类型的空间利用模式。我们将对72只自由放养蜥蜴的高分辨率全球定位系统(GPS)追踪与重复的行为测定以及对其食物和避难所资源空间分布的调查相结合。贝叶斯广义线性混合模型(GLMM)显示,蜥蜴在邻里尺度上对资源的空间分布以及其他同种个体的空间利用强度做出反应(表现出明显的同种回避)。行为类型(尤其是攻击性)以季节性依赖的方式影响蜥蜴的空间利用及其对生态和社会因素的反应。在季节后期,当食物变得稀缺且环境条件变得更加恶劣时,许多这些影响和相互作用会更强。例如,避难所和食物的可获得性在季节后期变得更加重要,不具攻击性的蜥蜴对这些预测因素的反应更强烈。这些发现凸显了动物空间利用中一个普遍被忽视的异质性来源,并增进了我们对导致行为驱动的疾病动态和社会结构的过程的机制理解。