The influence of habitat patch attributes on coyote group size and interaction in a fragmented landscape

被引:17
|
作者
Atwood, TC [1 ]
机构
[1] Utah State Univ, Dept Forest Range & Wildlife Sci, Logan, UT 84322 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1139/Z05-180
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
From February 2000 to January 2002, I investigated correlates of landscape fragmentation with coyote (Canis latrans Say, 1823) group size and resulting effects on within-group spatial interaction in west-central Indiana, USA, to determine whether habitat patch dispersion and attributes mediated group maintenance and persistence. Twenty-one radio-collared coyotes were assigned to 15 social groups; group territories were then classified as having dispersed (n = 10) or aggregated (n = 5) resource patches. Group size was larger in territories with aggregated patches and was directly correlated to forest area and inversely correlated to corridor area (top-ranked model: group size = beta(0) + forest area - corridor area; AIC(c) = -2.12, Delta AIC(c) = 0.0, omega(i) = 0.67). Territories with aggregated patches had proportionally more forest (mean = 0.41, SE = 0.02) and less corridor (mean = 0.01, SE = 0.002) habitats than territories with dispersed patches (forest area: mean = 0.11, SE = 0.01; corridor area: mean = 0.03, SE = 0.002). Within-group spatial interaction was not influenced by patch dispersion. I suggest that differences in territory and group sizes relative to patch dispersion reflect the complex combination of environmental pressures present in human-dominated landscapes and their potential to perturb canid social organization.
引用
收藏
页码:80 / 87
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Line Transect Surveying of Arboreal Monkeys: Problems of Group Size and Spread in a Highly Fragmented Landscape
    Ferrari, Stephen F.
    Chagas, Renata R. D.
    Souza-Alves, Joao Pedro
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, 2010, 72 (12) : 1100 - 1107
  • [32] Influence of habitat, litter type, and soil invertebrates on leaf-litter decomposition in a fragmented Amazonian landscape
    Vasconcelos, HL
    Laurance, WF
    OECOLOGIA, 2005, 144 (03) : 456 - 462
  • [33] Moth community responses to woodland creation: The influence of woodland age, patch characteristics and landscape attributes
    Fuentes-Montemayor, Elisa
    Watts, Kevin
    Sansum, Philip
    Scott, Will
    Park, Kirsty J.
    DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS, 2022, 28 (09) : 1993 - 2007
  • [34] Habitat amount and quality, not patch size, determine persistence of a woodland-dependent mammal in an agricultural landscape
    Riana Gardiner
    Glen Bain
    Rowena Hamer
    Menna E. Jones
    Christopher N. Johnson
    Landscape Ecology, 2018, 33 : 1837 - 1849
  • [35] Habitat amount and quality, not patch size, determine persistence of a woodland-dependent mammal in an agricultural landscape
    Gardiner, Riana
    Bain, Glen
    Hamer, Rowena
    Jones, Menna E.
    Johnson, Christopher N.
    LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 2018, 33 (11) : 1837 - 1849
  • [36] The effects of habitat size and quality on the orb-weaving spider guild (Arachnida: Araneae) in an Atlantic Forest fragmented landscape
    Nogueira, Andre do Amaral
    Pinto-da-Rocha, Ricardo
    JOURNAL OF ARACHNOLOGY, 2016, 44 (01) : 36 - 45
  • [37] Patch occupancy by stone martens Martes foina in fragmented landscapes of central Spain:: the role of fragment size, isolation and habitat structure
    Virgós, E
    García, FJ
    ACTA OECOLOGICA-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2002, 23 (04): : 231 - 237
  • [38] Nestling diet optimization and condition in relation to prey attributes and breeding patch size in a patch-resident insectivorous passerine: an optimal continuum and habitat constraints
    Orlowski, Grzegorz
    Frankiewicz, Joanna
    Karg, Jerzy
    JOURNAL OF ORNITHOLOGY, 2017, 158 (01): : 169 - 184
  • [39] Nestling diet optimization and condition in relation to prey attributes and breeding patch size in a patch-resident insectivorous passerine: an optimal continuum and habitat constraints
    Grzegorz Orłowski
    Joanna Frankiewicz
    Jerzy Karg
    Journal of Ornithology, 2017, 158 : 169 - 184
  • [40] Effects of habitat suitability and minimum patch size thresholds on the assessment of landscape connectivity for jaguars in the Sierra Gorda, Mexico
    Ramirez-Reyes, Carlos
    Bateman, Brooke L.
    Radeloff, Volker C.
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2016, 204 : 296 - 305