Hansen K Whitney, Jordan Neil R, Claase Megan J, McNutt J W, Wilson Alan, Wilmers Christopher C
Environmental Studies Department University of California Santa Cruz California USA.
Botswana Predator Conservation Maun Botswana.
Ecol Evol. 2025 Jun 18;15(6):e71567. doi: 10.1002/ece3.71567. eCollection 2025 Jun.
While sociality is known to mediate territorial processes, it is less clear how sociality interacts with environmental features and neighbors' location to influence habitat selection and behavior. Scent marking, a fundamental behavior in maintaining territories, can be utilized by receiving conspecifics to evaluate both encounter risk and competitive ability of the depositing individual or group. African wild dog packs were followed in the field across 2010-2021, where researchers recorded individual behaviors and pack composition, including scent marking behaviors. We combined this historical and unique behavioral dataset with co-occurring GPS collar data to make inferences on territorial behaviors, sociality, and habitat selection across spatial scales. We performed three analyses to determine (1) the relative probability of scent mark placement, (2) the probability of scent marking, and (3) the trade-off strategy between scent marking and hunting, as predicted by habitat, neighbors' territories, and pack social composition. Specifically, we used resource selection function frameworks to determine how and whether conspecifics influenced habitat selection and behavior at multiple orders of selection. We found that conspecifics were influential across all three analyses, and mediated the impact of habitat on scent mark placement and probability. Scent mark placement and probability were both influenced by the social composition of packs, specifically pup presence, pack size, and number of overlapping neighbors, while pack size and pack experience influenced territorial maintenance strategy. Our findings demonstrate the importance of social structure across scales of territorial processes, from larger scale habitat selection to the probability of a behavior. We demonstrate how key behavioral theories underpinning territoriality function at the scale of habitat selection and behavioral decision-making in a free-ranging, large carnivore. Future research should continue to incorporate sociality in understanding the habitat selection of animals.
虽然已知社会性会调节领地行为过程,但社会性如何与环境特征及邻居位置相互作用以影响栖息地选择和行为,却不太清楚。气味标记是维持领地的一种基本行为,接收同种个体可以利用它来评估留下气味个体或群体的遭遇风险和竞争能力。在2010年至2021年期间,研究人员在野外追踪了非洲野犬群,记录了个体行为和群体组成,包括气味标记行为。我们将这个历史悠久且独特的行为数据集与同时获取的GPS项圈数据相结合,以推断不同空间尺度上的领地行为、社会性和栖息地选择。我们进行了三项分析,以确定(1)气味标记放置的相对概率,(2)气味标记的概率,以及(3)如栖息地、邻居领地和群体社会组成所预测的,气味标记与狩猎之间的权衡策略。具体而言,我们使用资源选择函数框架来确定同种个体如何以及是否在多个选择层次上影响栖息地选择和行为。我们发现,同种个体在所有三项分析中都具有影响力,并介导了栖息地对气味标记放置和概率的影响。气味标记的放置和概率都受到群体社会组成的影响,特别是幼崽的存在、群体大小和重叠邻居的数量,而群体大小和群体经验则影响领地维持策略。我们的研究结果表明,社会结构在领地行为过程的各个尺度上都很重要,从更大尺度的栖息地选择到行为的概率。我们展示了支撑领地性的关键行为理论在自由放养的大型食肉动物的栖息地选择和行为决策尺度上是如何发挥作用的。未来的研究应继续将社会性纳入对动物栖息地选择的理解中。