Penteriani Vincenzo, Delgado María Del Mar, Kojola Ilpo, Heikkinen Samuli, Fedorca Ancuta, García-Sánchez Pino, Fedorca Mihai, Find'o Slavomír, Skuban Michaela, Balbontín Javier, Zarzo-Arias Alejandra, Falcinelli Daniele, Ordiz Andrés, Swenson Jon E
Department of Evolutionary Ecology, National Museum of Natural Sciences (MNCN), Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Madrid, Spain.
Biodiversity Research Institute (IMIB, CSIC-Oviedo University-Principality of Asturias), Mieres Campus, 33600, Mieres, Spain.
Mov Ecol. 2025 Apr 3;13(1):24. doi: 10.1186/s40462-025-00553-6.
Limited information exists on the active role of females during mate searching. Theory primarily focuses on male reproductive behaviours, suggesting male distribution follows that of females, while female distribution is influenced by food resources and habitat. This approach might underestimate the females' role in shaping mating strategies. Incorporating a female perspective into mating studies can enhance our understanding of evolutionary factors.
Using GPS data from brown bears Ursus arctos across Finland, Romania and Slovakia, we explored female movement behaviour during the mating period. First, we estimated movement speed, total distance and net distance at a daily scale. Then, we quantitatively described when the movement peaks occur by estimating two critical points of the functions described by each of the aforementioned movement parameters: (1) the point in time when the rate of change in brown bear movement behaviour is the highest; and (2) the point in time when each aspect of brown bear movement is most pronounced. We quantified temporal variations in male and female movements throughout the year using generalized additive mixed models, while we used linear mixed models to assess the relationship between peak movement parameters, bear sex and population.
Our findings identified two overlooked behaviours: (1) male and female movement parameters showed the highest rate of change during the mating season, challenging the notion of male roaming as the primary mating strategy; and (2) females travelled the longest distances during the mating season, potentially seeking high-quality mates. This behaviour aligns with the strategy of engaging in copulations with multiple males to avoid infanticide.
Our study reveals novel insights into the active role of female brown bears in mating strategies, challenging traditional male-centric views. These results support the need for detailed investigations into female behaviours across mammalian taxa, which offer potential to advance our understanding of mammalian social and mating systems. Local differences also underscore the importance of social and ecological conditions to explain variation in the female role in mating strategies.
关于雌性在配偶搜寻过程中的积极作用,现有信息有限。理论主要关注雄性的生殖行为,认为雄性的分布遵循雌性的分布,而雌性的分布受食物资源和栖息地的影响。这种方法可能低估了雌性在塑造交配策略中的作用。将雌性视角纳入交配研究可以增进我们对进化因素的理解。
利用芬兰、罗马尼亚和斯洛伐克棕熊的GPS数据,我们探索了交配期雌性的移动行为。首先,我们在每日尺度上估计移动速度、总距离和净距离。然后,通过估计上述每个移动参数所描述函数的两个临界点,定量描述移动高峰出现的时间:(1)棕熊移动行为变化率最高的时间点;(2)棕熊移动各方面最显著的时间点。我们使用广义相加混合模型量化全年雄性和雌性移动的时间变化,同时使用线性混合模型评估移动高峰参数、熊的性别和种群之间的关系。
我们的研究发现了两种被忽视的行为:(1)雄性和雌性的移动参数在交配季节变化率最高,这对将雄性漫游作为主要交配策略的观点提出了挑战;(2)雌性在交配季节移动的距离最长,可能是在寻找高质量的配偶。这种行为与与多个雄性交配以避免杀婴的策略一致。
我们的研究揭示了雌性棕熊在交配策略中积极作用的新见解,挑战了传统的以雄性为中心的观点。这些结果支持对哺乳动物类群中雌性行为进行详细研究的必要性,这有可能增进我们对哺乳动物社会和交配系统的理解。局部差异也凸显了社会和生态条件对于解释雌性在交配策略中作用变化的重要性。