Habitat Use and Positional Behavior of Northern Palm Squirrels (Funambulus pennantii) in an Urban Forest in Central Nepal

Author:

Perodaskalaki Anastasia12,Rammou Dimitra-Lida3ORCID,Thapamagar Tilak4ORCID,Bhandari Shivish5,Bhusal Daya Ram6,Youlatos Dionisios3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Graduate School of Life Sciences, Utrecht University, NL-3584 Utrecht, The Netherlands

2. Natural History Museum of Crete, University of Crete, GR-71409 Heraklion, Greece

3. Department of Zoology, School of Biology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, GR-54124 Thessaloniki, Greece

4. Natural Science Society, Kirtipur-05, Kathmandu, Nepal

5. Patuxent Environmental and Aquatic Research Laboratory, Morgan State University, St. Leonard, MD 20685, USA

6. Central Department of Zoology, Tribhuvan University, Kirtipur 44600, Nepal

Abstract

Urban forests impose significant challenges to the animals that inhabit them due to the altered properties of available substrates from anthropogenic interventions. To cope with these structural peculiarities, urban species exhibit behavioral adjustments to successfully exploit the urban habitat. The present study examined habitat use and positional behavior of northern palm squirrels (Funambulus pennantii) in the urban forests of Kathmandu, Nepal, to test such behavioral modifications. Between July and August 2018, we collected focal animal instantaneous data on the behavior, locomotor/postural mode, forest layer, tree crown part, and substrate type, size, and inclination use of four different individuals. Our results indicated a primarily arboreal species, mostly using the middle canopy layers and the intermediate and central tree parts. Moreover, tree branches and artificial substrates were commonly used that were mainly large and horizontal. Locomotion was dominated by quadrupedalism and claw climb, whereas postures by quadrupedal stand, and, to a lesser extent, sit and claw cling. Most of our initial predictions were only partly supported by our findings. This behavioral idiosyncrasy most likely reflects the adaptive flexibility of the species to human-modified habitats. In this way, northern palm squirrels apparently expanded their ecological niche and successfully persisted against anthropogenic pressures throughout their range. As urban expansion is inexorable, more research is required to understand the behavioral and ecological flexibility of animals that effectively exploit these impacted habitats.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Global and Planetary Change

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