Title: Behavioral Ecology: Movement
1Behavioral EcologyMovement Orientation
- Why move?
- Types of movement
- Metapopulations
- Local Distribution
- Home Range
- Territoriality
- Migration - Mass movements
- Breeding
- Over-wintering
- Movements of juveniles - Dispersal
- Homing/Orientation
2I. Why move?
Reasons to move
- Mortality can be high when individuals move from
one habitat to another
3A. General types of movement
- Herps are not distributed randomly! Some places
are better than others - Station keeping movements directly related to
the acquisition of resources within a home range - Ranging behavior exploring new habitats or
resource patches - Dispersal juveniles leaving their parents home
range to find their own
4B. Metapopulations populations of populations
- Spatially subdivided populations
5II. Local distribution of individuals
- Home ranges area which individuals move within
do not defend from conspecifics - Association between body size home range
- Resources
- Food, shelter, thermoregulation sites, escape
routes - Social activities
- Finding mates
- Calculating home range minimum polygon method
6- Minimum polygon method of calculating home ranges
- Measure the area that encompasses all of the
outer points within which an individual occurs. - Most widely used method
- Good for species living in 2D habitats
- Does not take into consideration amount of time
or relative frequency with which an individual
might use different parts of the home range
7Anolis transversalis -
8Home range can vary through time/space
- Terrestrial amphibians, during non-breeding
season have small home ranges away from water - Pond breeding species, home range breaks down
during breeding events - Microhabitat specificity a factor
- Vary w/sex reproductive state
9Resource dispersion home range
- Habitat resource patches
- Depleted / not depleted
- How rapidly will resources be replenished?
- Abundant resources limited home range
- Resources renewed slowly wider home range
10Herbivores wider food sources, but abundant
Masticophis (whiptail) has to go where the food
is
11Iguana iguana
Dermochelys coriacea
Hoplocephalus bungaroides
12B. Territoriality
- Territory area within the home range which is
defended against conspecifics other species - Usually has some sort of defendable resource
- Defense results in exclusivity
- Most often males defend territory
- Direct combat
- Threats
- Avoidance
- Selection favors those that control use
resources in a way that positively influences
their reproductive success
13Amphibians exhibiting territoriality
Dendrobates pumilio
Plethodon cinereus
14III. Migration - Mass movements
- A. Breeding migrations
- Amphibians - Triggered by rainfall temp,
usually starting at night but continuing
through day - Mass movements explosive breeders, i.e.
Ambystoma Bufo move en masse to and from
breeding ponds - Reptiles Vipera, Kinosternon, Chelydra,
Crocodylus, Iguana, Sea turtles
15Loggerhead turtle movement monitored via
satellite
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17B. Over-wintering movement
- Seeking more hospitable climate
- Flowing water of streams vs. frozen water of
lakes/ponds
18IV. Dispersal
- usually refers to juveniles leaving home ranges
of parents to find a home of their own, reasons
to disperse - Costs
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20V. Homing Behavior
- Ability of displaced individuals to return to
their original location animals must be able to
sense the direction they are moving
21ORIENTATION
Pilotage - orientation with respect to fixed
landmarks
home
22Mechanisms of orientation
- Local environmental cues (landmarks)
- Smells, visual cues
- Compass orientation
- X-Y axis orientation
- Depends on sunny conditions
- Must have built in sense of daily changes in the
suns position (internal clock) - Celestial orientation
- Magnetic orientation
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25Navigation - orientation without fixed landmarks