Roe J H, Kish A L, Nacy J P
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina Pembroke, Pembroke, NC, USA.
J Zool (1987). 2020 Jan;310(1):71-82. doi: 10.1111/jzo.12732. Epub 2019 Aug 31.
Animal movements and use of space are in part determined by interactions between individual attributes such as sex and body size and extrinsic environmental factors such as the seasonal availability, quality and spatial configuration of resource patches in the landscape. Fire is a common and widespread disturbance process that has the potential to affect animal movements through modifications to the environment. Using radiotelemetry, we examined the contribution of these factors to variation in movements and home range over a 5-year period in a forest-dwelling terrestrial turtle, , at fire-maintained and unburned habitats in the southeastern United States. Female turtles had annual home-range sizes twice as large as males and moved longer distances per day during the nesting season (June and July), but males exhibited greater spatial fidelity from year to year. Turtles at the unburned site had home-range sizes twice as large as those at the fire-maintained site, and home-range size also decreased with increasing frequency and extent of fire, but this latter effect was strongest in females. Home-range behavior was highly repeatable within individuals of both sexes over time. This is the first evidence that fire influences the spatial ecology and movements of turtles, most likely through fire's impact on the spatial configuration, availability and quality of critical resources. That individuals behaved consistently through time, but differently from one another according to both intrinsic individual attributes and extrinsic environmental factors provides strong evidence of consistent inter- and intra-population variation in space use and movement behaviors in . Such intra-specific behavioral variation suggests applying caution when extrapolating results to other sites across the geographic range of a species for use in conservation and management.
动物的活动和空间利用部分取决于个体属性(如性别和体型)与外部环境因素(如景观中资源斑块的季节性可利用性、质量和空间配置)之间的相互作用。火灾是一种常见且广泛存在的干扰过程,它有可能通过改变环境来影响动物的活动。我们使用无线电遥测技术,在美国东南部火灾维持区和未燃烧区,对一种栖息于森林的陆龟在5年时间里这些因素对其活动和家域变化的影响进行了研究。雌龟的年家域面积是雄龟的两倍,在筑巢季节(6月和7月)每天移动的距离更长,但雄龟年复一年地表现出更高的空间忠诚度。未燃烧区的龟的家域面积是火灾维持区龟的两倍,家域面积也随着火灾发生频率和范围的增加而减小,但后一种影响在雌龟中最为明显。家域行为在两性个体中随时间高度可重复。这是首个表明火灾影响龟的空间生态学和活动的证据,很可能是通过火灾对关键资源的空间配置、可利用性和质量的影响。个体在时间上行为一致,但根据内在个体属性和外在环境因素彼此不同,这有力证明了该龟在空间利用和活动行为上种群间和种群内存在一致的差异。这种种内行为差异表明,在将结果外推至物种地理分布范围内的其他地点以用于保护和管理时应谨慎行事。