Seasonal and predator-prey effects on circadian activity of free-ranging mammals revealed by camera traps

Author:

Caravaggi Anthony12ORCID,Gatta Maria3,Vallely Marie-Claire14,Hogg Kayleigh1,Freeman Marianne1,Fadaei Erfan15,Dick Jaimie T.A.15,Montgomery W. Ian15,Reid Neil15,Tosh David G.16

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, Queen’s University Belfast, UK

2. School of Biological Earth and Environmental Sciences, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

3. School or Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa

4. Northern Ireland Environment Agency, UK

5. Institute of Global Food Security (IGFS), Queen’s University Belfast, UK

6. National Museums Northern Ireland, UK

Abstract

Endogenous circadian and seasonal activity patterns are adapted to facilitate effective utilisation of environmental resources. Activity patterns are shaped by physiological constraints, evolutionary history, circadian and seasonal changes and may be influenced by other factors, including ecological competition and interspecific interactions. Remote-sensing camera traps allow the collection of species presence data throughout the 24 h period and for almost indefinite lengths of time. Here, we collate data from 10 separate camera trap surveys in order to describe circadian and seasonal activity patterns of 10 mammal species, and, in particular, to evaluate interspecific (dis)associations of five predator-prey pairs. We recorded 8,761 independent detections throughout Northern Ireland. Badgers, foxes, pine martens and wood mice were nocturnal; European and Irish hares and European rabbits were crepuscular; fallow deer and grey and red squirrels were diurnal. All species exhibited significant seasonal variation in activity relative to the timing of sunrise/sunset. Foxes in particular were more crepuscular from spring to autumn and hares more diurnal. Lagged regression analyses of predator-prey activity patterns between foxes and prey (hares, rabbits and wood mice), and pine marten and prey (squirrel and wood mice) revealed significant annual and seasonal cross-correlations. We found synchronised activity patterns between foxes and hares, rabbits and wood mice and pine marten and wood mice, and asynchrony between squirrels and pine martens. Here, we provide fundamental ecological data on endemic, invasive, pest and commercially valuable species in Ireland, as well as those of conservation importance and those that could harbour diseases of economic and/or zoonotic relevance. Our data will be valuable in informing the development of appropriate species-specific methodologies and processes and associated policies.

Funder

Northern Ireland Challenge Fund

Northern Ireland Environment Agency’s Natural Heritage Research Partnership

Natural Heritage Research Partnership (NHRP)

Northern Ireland Environment Agency (NIEA) and Quercus

Queen’s University Belfast (QUB)

People’s Trust for Endangered Species (PTES)

Department of Environment, Agriculture and Rural Affairs (DAERA) or Department for the Economy (DfE)

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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