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Site fidelity and effects of body mass on home-range size of Egyptian mongooses
Author(s) -
Francisço Palomares
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
canadian journal of zoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.607
H-Index - 104
eISSN - 1480-3283
pISSN - 0008-4301
DOI - 10.1139/z94-065
Subject(s) - home range , biology , mongoose , carnivore , range (aeronautics) , zoology , polygyny , ecology , demography , predation , population , materials science , composite material , sociology , habitat
Home-range size has been found to be related to body mass of some animals both across species and within species when the spatial strategies of the sexes differ. I studied home-range size in a polygynous carnivore, the Egyptian mongoose (Herpesres ichneumon), and compared observed home-range size with predictions based on body mass. First, I tested whether mongooses actually exhibited site fidelity (for daily and multiday periods). Mongooses always showed site fidelity for a multiday home range, but in only 59% of the cases for daily home range. Adult males exhibited less daily site fidelity than\uddid adult females or young. Multiday home-range size was similar among age—sex classes, but males had significantly more core areas than females or young. Moltiday home-range size was positively correlated with body mass for adult males (r20.98, P0.0122) and negatively correlated with body mass of adult females (r2 = 0.40, P = 0.0374). Differences in these relationships and daily site fidelity between adult males and females suggest that the spatial strategies of male and\udfemale Egyptian mongooses are diffesent, with the \arger femaes defending the areas richer in resouTces and the larger males having more access to femalesPeer reviewe

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