Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, University of Georgia, PO Drawer E, Aiken, SC, 29802, USA.
Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, University of Georgia, 180 E Green St, Athens, GA, 30602, USA.
Sci Rep. 2023 Jun 27;13(1):10447. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-37323-6.
Raccoons (Procyon lotor) are routinely translocated both legally and illegally to mitigate conflicts with humans, which has contributed to the spread of rabies virus across eastern North America. The movement behavior of translocated raccoons has important ramifications for disease transmission yet remains understudied and poorly quantified. To examine the spatial ecology of raccoons following experimental translocation, we performed reciprocal 16 km-distance translocations of 30 raccoons between habitats of high and low raccoon density (bottomland hardwood and upland pine, respectively) across the Savannah River Site (SRS) in Aiken, South Carolina, USA (2018-2019). Translocation influenced patterns of raccoon space use, with translocated animals exhibiting a 13-fold increase in 95% utilization distributions (UDs) post- compared to pre-translocation (mean 95% UD 35.8 ± 36.1 km vs 1.96 ± 1.17 km). Raccoons originating from upland pine habitats consistently had greater space use and larger nightly movement distances post-translocation compared to raccoons moved from bottomland hardwood habitats, whereas these differences were generally not observed prior to translocation. Estimated home ranges of male raccoons were twice the area as estimated for female raccoons, on average, and this pattern was not affected by translocation. After a transient period lasting on average 36.5 days (SD = 30.0, range = 3.25-92.8), raccoons often resumed pre-experiment movement behavior, with 95% UD sizes not different from those prior to translocation (mean = 2.27 ± 1.63km). Most animals established new home ranges after translocation, whereas three raccoons moved > 16 km from their release point back to the original capture location. Four animals crossed a 100-m wide river within the SRS post-translocation, but this behavior was not documented among collared raccoons prior to translocation. Large increases in space use combined with the crossing of geographic barriers such as rivers may lead to elevated contact rates with conspecifics, which can heighten disease transmission risks following translocation. These results provide additional insights regarding the potential impacts of raccoon translocation towards population level risks of rabies outbreaks and underscore the need to discourage mesocarnivore translocations to prevent further spread of wildlife rabies.
浣熊(Procyon lotor)经常被合法或非法地转移,以减轻与人类的冲突,这导致了狂犬病病毒在北美东部的传播。被转移的浣熊的迁移行为对疾病传播有重要影响,但仍未得到充分研究和量化。为了研究实验性转移后浣熊的空间生态,我们在美国南卡罗来纳州艾肯的萨凡纳河场址(SRS)进行了 30 只浣熊在高和低浣熊密度栖息地(底层硬木和高地松)之间的 16 公里距离的互惠性转移(2018-2019 年)。迁移影响了浣熊空间利用的模式,与迁移前相比,迁移后的动物的 95%利用分布(UD)增加了 13 倍(平均 95% UD 35.8±36.1 公里比 1.96±1.17 公里)。来自高地松栖息地的浣熊在迁移后始终比来自底层硬木栖息地的浣熊具有更大的空间利用和更大的夜间移动距离,而这些差异在迁移前通常不存在。雄性浣熊的估计家域面积平均是雌性浣熊的两倍,而且这种模式不受迁移的影响。在平均持续 36.5 天(SD=30.0,范围=3.25-92.8)的短暂过渡期后,浣熊通常恢复实验前的运动行为,95% UD 大小与迁移前没有差异(平均=2.27±1.63 公里)。大多数动物在迁移后建立了新的家域,而有 3 只浣熊从释放点迁移回原来的捕获地点超过 16 公里。4 只动物在迁移后穿过了 SRS 内一条 100 米宽的河流,但在迁移前没有记录到佩戴项圈的浣熊有这种行为。空间利用的大幅增加,加上河流等地理屏障的穿越,可能会导致与同种动物的接触率升高,从而增加迁移后的疾病传播风险。这些结果提供了有关浣熊迁移对狂犬病爆发的种群水平风险的潜在影响的更多见解,并强调需要阻止中型食肉动物的迁移,以防止野生动物狂犬病的进一步传播。