Erdtmann Dana, Keuling Oliver
Institute for Terrestrial and Aquatic Wildlife Research, University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Hannover, Germany.
PeerJ. 2020 Nov 18;8:e10409. doi: 10.7717/peerj.10409. eCollection 2020.
Although the almost worldwide distributed wild boar is a well-studied species, little is known about the behaviour of autochthonous, free living wild boar in a spatiotemporal context which can help to better understand wild boar in conflict terms with humans and to find solutions. The use of camera traps is a favourable and non-invasive method to study them. To observe natural behaviour, 60 camera traps were placed for three months in a state forest of 17.8 km in the region of the Luneburg Heath in northern Germany. In this area wild boar, roe deer, red deer, wolves and humans are common. The cameras recorded 20 s length video clips when animals passed the detection zone and could be triggered again immediately afterwards. In total 38 distinct behavioural elements were observed, which were assigned to one of seven behavioural categories. The occurrence of the behavioural categories per day was evaluated to compare their frequencies and see which are more essential than others. Generalised Additive Models were used to analyse the occurrence of each behaviour in relation to habitat and activity time. The results show that essential behavioural categories like foraging behaviour, locomotion and vigilance behaviour occurred more frequently than behaviour that "just" served for the well-being of wild boar. These three behavioural categories could be observed together mostly in the night in broad-leaved forests with a herb layer of 50-100%, comfort behaviour occurred mostly at the ponds in coniferous forest. It is also observable that the behavioural categories foraging and comfort behaviour alternated several times during the night which offers the hypothesis that foraging is mostly followed by comfort behaviour. These findings pave the way towards implementing effective control strategies in the wild and animal welfare in captivity.
尽管野猪几乎分布于全球,是一个已得到充分研究的物种,但对于本地自由生活的野猪在时空背景下的行为却知之甚少,而了解这些行为有助于更好地理解野猪与人类的冲突问题并找到解决方案。使用相机陷阱是研究它们的一种有利且非侵入性的方法。为了观察自然行为,在德国北部吕讷堡石南草原地区一片面积为17.8公里的国有森林中放置了60个相机陷阱,为期三个月。在这个区域,野猪、狍、马鹿、狼和人类都很常见。当动物经过检测区域时,相机会录制时长20秒的视频片段,并且之后可以立即再次触发。总共观察到38种不同的行为元素,这些行为元素被归为七个行为类别之一。评估每天各行为类别的出现情况,以比较它们的频率,并查看哪些类别比其他类别更重要。使用广义相加模型来分析每种行为的出现与栖息地和活动时间的关系。结果表明,诸如觅食行为、移动和警惕行为等重要行为类别比那些“仅仅”为野猪自身福祉服务的行为出现得更频繁。这三种行为类别大多能在夜间的阔叶林里同时观察到,阔叶林的草本层覆盖率为50%至100%,舒适行为大多发生在针叶林的池塘边。还可以观察到,觅食和舒适行为类别在夜间交替出现了几次,这提出了一个假设,即觅食行为之后大多会跟随着舒适行为。这些发现为在野外实施有效的控制策略和圈养动物的福利提供了思路。