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- Title
Testing five hypotheses of sexual segregation in an arctic ungulate.
- Authors
LOE, LEIF EGIL; IRVINE, R. JUSTIN; BONENFANT, CHRISTOPHE; STIEN, AUDUN; LANGVATN, ROLF; ALBON, STEVE D.; MYSTERUD, ATLE; STENSETH, NILS CHR.
- Abstract
1. Sexual segregation occurs in most species of sexually dimorphic ungulates. At least five not mutually exclusive hypotheses have been formulated to explain patterns of social, habitat and spatial segregation; the indirect competition hypothesis (H1), the nutritional needs hypothesis (H2), the activity budget hypothesis (H3), the weather sensitivity hypothesis (H4), and the predation risk hypothesis (H5). 2. Each hypothesis has a unique set of predictions with respect to the occurrence of segregation, and how seasonality, density dependence and reproductive status affect sexual segregation. 3. We tested this set of predictions in order to separate the hypotheses H1–H5 for patterns of sexual segregation of the Svalbard reindeer based on 9 years data on seasonal estimates of spatial, habitat and social (i.e. grouping with their own sex) segregation in combination with resource selection functions. 4. Our results do not support that one single mechanism causes segregation. The activity budget hypothesis, the nutritional needs hypothesis and the weather sensitivity hypothesis were all partially supported, while the predation risk hypothesis was discarded for Svalbard reindeer because predators have been absent for at least 5000 years. Several mechanisms are thus interacting to explain the full-year pattern of sexual segregation and the combination of mechanisms varies among species and populations.
- Subjects
REINDEER; UNGULATES; ANIMAL sexual behavior; HABITATS; HABITAT selection; ANIMAL ecology; ANIMAL populations; ANIMAL communities; ECOLOGY
- Publication
Journal of Animal Ecology, 2006, Vol 75, Issue 2, p485
- ISSN
0021-8790
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1365-2656.2006.01069.x