Push and pull factors driving movement in a social mammal: context dependent behavioral plasticity at the landscape scale

Author:

Byrne Andrew W123,O’Keeffe James34,Buesching Christina D5,Newman Chris5

Affiliation:

1. Agri-food and Biosciences Institute, Veterinary Science Division, Stormont, Belfast, UK

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

3. Centre for Veterinary Epidemiology and Risk Analysis (CVERA), School of Veterinary Medicine, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin, Ireland

4. Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Agriculture House, Dublin, Ireland

5. Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, The Recanati-Kaplan Centre, Tubney House, Abingdon Road, Tubney, Abingdon, Oxfordshire, UK

Abstract

Abstract Understanding how key parameters (e.g., density, range-size, and configuration) can affect animal movement remains a major goal of population ecology. This is particularly important for wildlife disease hosts, such as the European badger Meles meles, a reservoir of Mycobacterium bovis. Here we show how movements of 463 individuals among 223 inferred group territories across 755 km2 in Ireland were affected by sex, age, past-movement history, group composition, and group size index from 2009 to 2012. Females exhibited a greater probability of moving into groups with a male-biased composition, but male movements into groups were not associated with group composition. Male badgers were, however, more likely to make visits into territories than females. Animals that had immigrated into a territory previously were more likely to emigrate in the future. Animals exhibiting such “itinerant” movement patterns were more likely to belong to younger age classes. Inter-territorial movement propensity was negatively associated with group size, indicating that larger groups were more stable and less attractive (or permeable) to immigrants. Across the landscape, there was substantial variation in inferred territory-size and movement dynamics, which was related to group size. This represents behavioral plasticity previously only reported at the scale of the species’ biogeographical range. Our results highlight how a “one-size-fits-all” explanation of badger movement is likely to fail under varying ecological contexts and scales, with implications for bovine tuberculosis management.

Funder

Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine

DAFM

University College Dublin

Agri-food and Biosciences Institute

Poleberry Foundation research fellowship

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology

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