Habitat selection in wildlife is a process that occurs at different scales: Balancing advantages, such as high abundance of food, with disadvantages, such as human disturbance. Large predators, with their large spatial requirements, are particularly sensitive to these disturbances.
From:
University of Freiburg
January 28, 2022 -- A team led by
conservation biologists Prof. Dr. Marco Heurich and Joseph Premier from the
Faculty of Environment and Natural Resources at the University of Freiburg has
studied this habitat selection process in Eurasian lynx. Their results,
published by the researchers in Biological Conservation, provide important
information for the conservation of this species in human-dominated landscapes.
"Through this study, we can generalize the habitat selection behavior of a
large carnivore species on a continental scale fort he first time,"
explains Heurich.
Large dataset with animals in several
European areas
The researchers led by Heurich and
Premier used a data set consisting of tracking data on 125 lynx from nine study
areas across Europe. They compared the locations available to and actually used
by the predators at two scales: the landscape scale, which shows how lynx place
their home range in the landscape, and the home range scale, which shows how
lynx select the habitats within their home range. For this comparison, the
research team used a novel machine learning approach called the random forest.
This was extended to include a random effect so that variability within and
between study areas could be accounted for.
What the animals avoid and how they
orient themselves
On the landscape scale the analysis
revealed that lynx avoid roads and human settlements. On the level of their
home range, the animals were oriented towards hiding places and the
availability of prey. The researchers found only minor differences between
female and male lynx in their choice of habitat.
Heurich and Premier found the greatest
differences in lynx habitat choice at the landscape level, where there were
clear differences between the various study areas, for example between the
Swiss Alps and the plains of Estonia. Within the foraging areas, lynx behaved
very similarly throughout Europe, preferring heterogeneous forest areas and
areas that provided protection from human disturbance.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/01/220128141305.htm
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