Livin' la vida local: philopatry results in consistent patterns of annual space use in a long‐lived lizard

Author:

Stalker J. B.1ORCID,Jones J. L.2,Hromada S. J.3ORCID,Nussear K. E.3,Vandergast A. G.4,Wood D. A.4,Tracy C. R.5,Gienger C. M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Center of Excellence for Field Biology Austin Peay State University Clarksville TN USA

2. Nevada Department of Wildlife Las Vegas NV USA

3. Department of Geography, Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology University of Nevada, Reno Reno NV USA

4. U.S. Geological Survey Western Ecological Research Center, San Diego Field Station San Diego CA USA

5. Department of Biology, Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology University of Nevada, Reno Reno NV USA

Abstract

AbstractFor animals exhibiting range residency, the home range is a useful framework to quantify space use. Some reptiles can live decades in the wild and experience extreme environmental variation that influences patterns of habitat use. Individuals may modify their use of space over time, reducing the utility of single‐year home range estimates. Very high frequency (VHF) telemetry data were collected for Gila monsters (Heloderma suspectum) at three Mojave Desert sites in Clark County, Nevada, and home range utilization distributions were calculated using an autocorrelated kernel density estimator. Home range size was consistent within individuals and populations, and home range size did not vary across years at any site. To measure home range fidelity (year‐to‐year reuse), we calculated Bhattacharyya's coefficient (BC) for each combination of years in which an individual was tracked and averaged estimates across individuals and populations. The average BC score was 0.86 (scale from 0 to 1; 0 = no overlap and 1 = complete overlap) and did not vary among populations. We modeled home range area accumulation to estimate the minimum sample size needed for asymptotic stability and found home range accumulation to be dynamic and variable within and across years and individuals. Analysis of the frequency of movement by individuals, average distance traveled per movement, and cumulative distance traveled per active season revealed that movement patterns vary considerably by year. Heterogeneity of space use among populations and individuals suggests that individual and local environmental variation, rather than annual variation in resource availability, may drive home range size and movement patterns of Gila monsters in southern Nevada. Annual variability in movement patterns did not translate to variability in home range size or location, and the species exhibits extremely high philopatry, using the same areas for periods of at least 3–5 years.

Funder

Austin Peay State University

Nevada Department of Wildlife

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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