García-Loor Jefferson, Gallego-Abenza Mario, Katsis Andrew C, Puehringer-Sturmayr Verena, Colombelli-Négrel Diane, Akçay Çağlar, Kleindorfer Sonia
Department of Behavioral and Cognitive Biology, University of Vienna, 1030 Vienna, Austria.
Konrad Lorenz Research Center for Behavior and Cognition, University of Vienna, 4645 Vienna, Austria.
J Ornithol. 2025;166(1):247-261. doi: 10.1007/s10336-024-02215-7. Epub 2024 Sep 21.
Information about an animal's home range (the geographical area in which it accesses resources for survival and reproduction) is vital broadly for understanding animal behavior and specifically for developing conservation management plans. Although personality traits-consistent individual differences in behavior across time and contexts-may affect an animal's home range size, we still lack a breadth of empirical studies across systems to fully appreciate this influence. Here, we tested the relationship between behavioral responses and home range size in two Darwin's finch species on Floreana Island: the critically endangered and range-restricted Medium Tree Finch () and the common and widespread Small Ground Finch (). Using a combination of rapid-assessment assays during both short-term captivity and in the field, we measured exploration and aggressiveness in males from both species. We then used radio telemetry to measure each bird's home range size over a week-long period. We predicted that (1) fast-exploring individuals would have larger home ranges, and (2) more aggressive individuals would have smaller home ranges. We found that Medium Tree Finches had smaller home ranges than Small Ground Finches, that exploratory behavior was positively correlated with home range size only in Small Ground Finches, and that, in both species, individuals' aggressiveness was negatively correlated with home range size, whereby the more aggressive individuals occupied smaller home ranges. We conclude that behavioral responses that align with major personality traits can predict home range size, which may provide an important tool for the conservation and management of endangered species when, for example, selecting individuals with different personality profiles for reintroduction.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10336-024-02215-7.
关于动物的家域(动物获取生存和繁殖资源的地理区域)的信息,对于广泛理解动物行为以及具体制定保护管理计划至关重要。尽管个性特征——行为在时间和情境上的一致个体差异——可能会影响动物的家域大小,但我们仍缺乏跨系统的广泛实证研究来充分认识这种影响。在此,我们测试了弗洛雷纳岛上两种达尔文雀的行为反应与家域大小之间的关系:极度濒危且分布范围受限的中型树雀()和常见且分布广泛的小型地雀()。通过在短期圈养和野外期间结合快速评估测定法,我们测量了这两个物种雄性的探索性和攻击性。然后,我们使用无线电遥测技术在为期一周的时间内测量每只鸟的家域大小。我们预测:(1)探索速度快的个体家域会更大,(2)攻击性更强的个体家域会更小。我们发现中型树雀的家域比小型地雀小,探索性行为仅在小型地雀中与家域大小呈正相关,并且在这两个物种中,个体的攻击性均与家域大小呈负相关,即攻击性越强的个体占据的家域越小。我们得出结论,与主要个性特征相符的行为反应可以预测家域大小,这可能为濒危物种的保护和管理提供重要工具,例如在选择具有不同个性特征的个体进行重新引入时。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s10336 - 024 - 02215 - 7获取的补充材料。