检索结果(检索关键词为:BEHAVIOR;结果共25条)
  • Forin-Wiart, Marie-Amelie; Enstipp, Manfred R.; Le Maho, Yvon; Handrich, Yves
    Integrative Zoology 2019年第14卷第1期 DOI:10.1111/1749-4877.12364
    关键词: HEART-RATE DATA; BLACK-BACKED GULLS; ENERGY-EXPENDITURE; METABOLIC-RATE; KING PENGUINS; RADIO-TRANSMITTERS; HARNESS ATTACHMENT; OXYGEN DEPLETION; SWIMMING SPEED; BEHAVIOR
    摘要: Bio-loggers are miniaturized autonomous devices that record quantitative data on the state of free-ranging animals (e.g. behavior, position and physiology) and their natural environment. This is especially relevant for species where direct visual observation is difficult or impossible. Today, ongoing technical development allows the monitoring of numerous parameters in an increasing range of species over extended periods. However, the external attachment of devices might affect various aspects of animal performance (energetics, thermoregulation, foraging as well as social and reproductive behavior), which ultimately affect fitness. External attachment might also increase entanglement risk and the conspicuousness of animals, leaving them more vulnerable to predation. By contrast, implantation of devices can mitigate many of these undesirable effects and might be preferable, especially for long-term studies, provided that the many challenges associated with surgical procedures can be mastered. Implantation may then allow us to gather data that would be impossible to obtain otherwise and thereby may provide new and ecologically relevant insights into the life of wild animals. Here, we: (i) discuss the pros and cons of attachment methods; (ii) highlight recent field studies that used implanted bio-loggers to address eco-physiological questions in a wide range of species; and (iii) discuss logger implantation in light of ethical considerations.

  • Vander Wall, Stephen B.; Dimitri, Lindsay A.; Longland, William S.; White, Joseph D. M.
    Integrative Zoology 2019年第14卷第1期 DOI:10.1111/1749-4877.12358
    关键词: SCATTER-HOARDING RODENTS; OAK-DISPERSAL SYNDROME; ORYZOPSIS-HYMENOIDES; HANDLING TIME; SIZE; BEHAVIOR; DECISION; TRAITS; PINUS; FATE
    摘要: Some rodents gather and store seeds. How many seeds they gather and how they treat those seeds is largely determined by seed traits such as mass, nutrient content, hardness of the seed coat, presence of secondary compounds, and germination schedule. Through their consumption and dispersal of seeds, rodents act as agents of natural selection on seed traits, and those traits influence how rodents forage. Many seeds that are scatter-hoarded by rodents are pilfered, or stolen, by other rodents, and seed traits also likely influence pilfering rates and seed fates of pilfered seeds. To clarify coevolutionary relationships between rodents and the plants that they disperse, one needs to understand the role of seed traits in rodent foraging decisions. We compared how the seeds of 4 species of plants that are dispersed by scatter-hoarding animals and that differ in value (singleleaf pinon pine, Pinus monophylla; desert peach, Prunus andersonii; antelope bitterbrush, Purshia tridentata; Utah juniper, Juniperus osteosperma) were pilfered and recached by rodents. One hundred artificial caches of the 4 seed species (25 per species) were prepared, and removal by rodents was monitored. Rodents pilfered high-value seeds more rapidly than the other seeds. Desert peach seeds, which contain toxic secondary compounds, were more frequently recached. Relatively low value seeds like Utah juniper and antelope bitterbrush were pilfered more slowly and were sometimes left at cache sites, and seeds of the latter species were transported shorter distances to new cache sites. The background density of seeds also appeared to influence the relative value of seeds.

  • Hetem, Robyn S.; Mitchell, Duncan; De Witt, Brenda A.; Fick, Linda G.; Maloney, Shane K.; Meyer, Leith C. R.; Fuller, Andrea
    Integrative Zoology 2019年第14卷第1期 DOI:10.1111/1749-4877.12341
    关键词: ACINONYX-JUBATUS; NATIONAL-PARK; REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS; PREDATOR AVOIDANCE; HABITAT SELECTION; CROCUTA-CROCUTA; FEEDING ECOLOGY; HOME-RANGE; BEHAVIOR; FELIDAE
    摘要: As one of the few felids that is predominantly diurnal, cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) can be exposed to high heat loads in their natural habitat. Little is known about long-term patterns of body temperature and activity (including hunting) in cheetahs because long-term concurrent measurements of body temperature and activity have never been reported for cheetahs, or, indeed, for any free-living felid. We report here body temperature and locomotor activity measured with implanted data loggers over 7 months in 5 free-living cheetahs in Namibia. Air temperature ranged from a maximum of 39 degrees C in summer to -2 degrees C in winter. Cheetahs had higher (similar to 0.4 degrees C) maximum 24-h body temperatures, later acrophase (similar to 1 h), with larger fluctuations in the range of the 24-h body temperature rhythm (approximately 0.4 degrees C) during a hot-dry period than during a cool-dry period, but maintained homeothermy irrespective of the climatic conditions. As ambient temperatures increased, the cheetahs shifted from a diurnal to a crepuscular activity pattern, with reduced activity between 900 and 1500 hours and increased nocturnal activity. The timing of hunts followed the general pattern of activity; the cheetahs hunted when they were on the move. Cheetahs hunted if an opportunity presented itself; on occasion they hunted in the midday heat or in total darkness (new moon). Biologging revealed insights into cheetah biology that are not accessible by traditional observer-based techniques.

  • Xu, Letian; Liu, Yipeng; Xu, Shijing; Lu, Min
    Integrative Zoology 2019年第14卷第6期 DOI:10.1111/1749-4877.12385
    关键词: DENDROCTONUS-VALENS; FRUIT-FLY; MICROBIOTA; COMMUNITY; DIVERSITY; MIDGUT; BEETLE; BEHAVIOR; INSECTS; COMPLEX
    摘要:

  • Sherry, David F.; Guigueno, Melanie F.
    Integrative Zoology 2019年第14卷第2期 DOI:10.1111/1749-4877.12312
    关键词: ADULT HIPPOCAMPAL NEUROGENESIS; BROWN-HEADED COWBIRDS; SEX-DIFFERENCES; SEASONAL DIFFERENCES; SPATIAL COGNITION; EVOLUTION; NEST; BEHAVIOR; MEMORY; HYPOTHESIS
    摘要: Cowbirds are brood parasites. Females lay their eggs in the nests of other species, which then incubate the cowbird eggs and raise the young cowbirds. Finding and returning to heterospecific nests presents cowbirds with several cognitive challenges. In some species, such as brown-headed cowbirds (Molothrus ater), females but not males search for and remember the locations of potential host nests. We describe recent research on sex differences in cognition and the hippocampus associated with this sex difference in search for host nests. Female brown-headed cowbirds perform better than males on some, but not all, tests of spatial memory and females show a pattern of adult hippocampal neurogenesis not found in males or in closely related non-parasitic birds. Because of the apparent specialization of the hippocampus, brown-headed cowbirds may be a good model in which to examine spatial information processing in the avian hippocampus and we also describe recent research on the spatial response properties of brown-headed cowbird hippocampal neurons.