TY - JOUR
T1 - Social and seasonal variation in dwarf mongoose home-range size, daily movements and burrow use
AU - Arbon, Josh J
AU - Morris-Drake, Amy
AU - Kern, Julie M
AU - Giuggioli, Luca
AU - Radford, Andrew N
PY - 2024/9/19
Y1 - 2024/9/19
N2 - When making decisions about resource use, social species must integrate not only environmental factors but also the influence of opportunities and costs associated with group-living. Bigger groups are expected to move further and to need access to larger areas for adequate food acquisition, but the relationships with group size can vary seasonally and with reproductive stage. Shelters are often more consistent in availability than food, but their use relates to factors such as predator defence and parasite transmission that are themselves influenced by group size and seasonality. Here, we used long-term data to investigate resource use and associated movement in a wild population of dwarf mongooses (Helogale parvula). We found that bigger groups occupied larger home-ranges, moved larger daily distances and covered more daily area than smaller ones, whilst environmental greenness (measured by normalised difference vegetation index [NDVI]) influenced daily movements in the breeding season but not the non-breeding season. Both assessed axes of seasonality also had pronounced effects on shelter use: mongoose groups used more unique sleeping burrows, and switched between burrows more often, in the breeding season, but also switched more when environmental greenness was higher. By investigating specific periods within the breeding season, we revealed the constraints that vulnerable, poorly mobile offspring impose on both group movements and burrow use, highlighting a potentially overlooked cost of reproduction. Our results show how both social and environmental factors can affect key resource-use decisions, demonstrating potential costs and benefits to group living within distinctly seasonal geographic areas.
AB - When making decisions about resource use, social species must integrate not only environmental factors but also the influence of opportunities and costs associated with group-living. Bigger groups are expected to move further and to need access to larger areas for adequate food acquisition, but the relationships with group size can vary seasonally and with reproductive stage. Shelters are often more consistent in availability than food, but their use relates to factors such as predator defence and parasite transmission that are themselves influenced by group size and seasonality. Here, we used long-term data to investigate resource use and associated movement in a wild population of dwarf mongooses (Helogale parvula). We found that bigger groups occupied larger home-ranges, moved larger daily distances and covered more daily area than smaller ones, whilst environmental greenness (measured by normalised difference vegetation index [NDVI]) influenced daily movements in the breeding season but not the non-breeding season. Both assessed axes of seasonality also had pronounced effects on shelter use: mongoose groups used more unique sleeping burrows, and switched between burrows more often, in the breeding season, but also switched more when environmental greenness was higher. By investigating specific periods within the breeding season, we revealed the constraints that vulnerable, poorly mobile offspring impose on both group movements and burrow use, highlighting a potentially overlooked cost of reproduction. Our results show how both social and environmental factors can affect key resource-use decisions, demonstrating potential costs and benefits to group living within distinctly seasonal geographic areas.
M3 - Article (Academic Journal)
SN - 1045-2249
JO - Behavioral Ecology
JF - Behavioral Ecology
ER -