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Spatiotemporal variability in resources affects herbivore home range formation in structurally contrasting and unpredictable agricultural landscapes
Authors:W Ullmann  " target="_blank">C Fischer  K Pirhofer-Walzl  " target="_blank">S Kramer-Schadt  N Blaum
Institution:1.Department of Plant Ecology and Nature Conservation,University of Potsdam,Potsdam,Germany;2.Institute for Landscape Biogeochemistry,Leibniz-Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF),Müncheberg,Germany;3.Restoration Ecology, Department of Ecology and Ecosystem Management,Technische Universit?t München,Munich,Germany;4.Institute of Biology, Dahlem Center for Plant Sciences,Freie Universit?t Berlin,Berlin,Germany;5.Department of Ecological Dynamics,Leibniz-Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW),Berlin,Germany;6.Department of Ecology,Technische Universit?t Berlin,Berlin,Germany
Abstract:

Context

Movement is one of the key mechanisms for animals to deal with changes within their habitats. Therefore, resource variability can impact animals’ home range formation, especially in spatially and temporally highly dynamic landscapes, such as farmland. However, the movement response to resource variability might depend on the underlying landscape structure.

Objectives

We investigated whether a given landscape structure affects the level of home range size adaptation in response to resource variability. We tested whether increasing resource variability forces herbivorous mammals to increase their home ranges.

Methods

In 2014 and 2015 we collared 40 European brown hares (Lepus europaeus) with GPS-tags to record hare movements in two regions in Germany with differing landscape structures. We examined hare home range sizes in relation to resource availability and variability by using the normalized difference vegetation index as a proxy.

Results

Hares in simple landscapes showed increasing home range sizes with increasing resource variability, whereas hares in complex landscapes did not enlarge their home range.

Conclusions

Animals in complex landscapes have the possibility to include various landscape elements within their home ranges and are more resilient against resource variability. But animals in simple landscapes with few elements experience shortcomings when resource variability becomes high. The increase in home range size, the movement related increase in energy expenditure, and a decrease in hare abundances can have severe implications for conservation of mammals in anthropogenic landscapes. Hence, conservation management could benefit from a better knowledge about fine-scaled effects of resource variability on movement behaviour.
Keywords:
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