Author:
Anstee S. D.,Roberts J. D.,O'Shea J. E.
Abstract
Mounds of the western pebble-mound mouse,
Pseudomys chapmani, are found throughout the
species’ Pilbara range in areas with iron-ore deposits of economic
significance. Translocation techniques are being examined as a means of
minimising the impact of mining on this species. In the absence of detailed
information on the biology of Pseudomys chapmani,
translocation is inadvisable. To provide such basic information, animal
densities, mound demographics and population sizes, and home-range and
core-area sizes were obtained by a combination of trapping and radio-tracking.
Mounds of Pseudomys chapmani were found to be inhabited
by social groups of up to 12 animals. Estimates of home-range size gave mean (
s.e.) values of 14·4 6·7 ha and 4·6 2·7 ha for
males and females, respectively; core areas were recorded at 0·93
0·29 ha for males and 0·29 0·16 ha for females.
Considerable overlap of home ranges was recorded between individuals from the
same and different mounds. Overlap at the core-area level occurred only
between individuals from the same mound. The high level of social complexity
and mound fidelity indicates that translocations should be directed at the
level of the social group rather than at the level of the individual.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
16 articles.
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