Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/135308
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Type: Journal article
Title: Intrinsic traits, social context, and local environment shape home range size and fidelity of sleepy lizards
Author: Payne, E.
Spiegel, O.
Sinn, D.L.
Leu, S.T.
Gardner, M.G.
Godfrey, S.S.
Wohlfeil, C.
Sih, A.
Citation: Ecological Monographs, 2022; 92(3):1-18
Publisher: Ecological Society of America
Issue Date: 2022
ISSN: 0012-9615
1557-7015
Statement of
Responsibility: 
E. Payne, O. Spiegel, D. L. Sinn, S. T. Leu, M. G. Gardner, S. S. Godfrey, C. Wohlfeil, A. Sih
Abstract: Home ranges (HRs), the regions within which animals interact with their environment, constitute a fundamental aspect of their ecology. HR sizes and locations commonly reflect costs and benefits associated with diverse social, biotic, and abiotic factors. Less is known, however, about how these factors affect intraspecific variation in HR size or fidelity (the individual’s tendency to maintain the same HR location over time) or whether variation in these features emerge from consistent differences among individuals or among the sites they occupy. To address this knowledge gap, we used an extensive GPS-tracking data set of a long-lived lizard, the sleepy lizard (Tiliqua rugosa),which included repeated observations of multiple individuals across years. We tested how three categories of predictors—(1) lizard characteristics (sex,aggressiveness, and parasitic tick counts), (2) environmental characteristics(precipitation, food, and refuge quality), and (3) social conditions (conspecific overlap and number of neighbors)—affected HR size and fidelity. We found that individuals differed consistently in the size and fidelity of annual HRs (with a repeatability of 0.58 and 0.33, respectively), and that all three categories of predictors affected both HR size and fidelity. For example, HRs were smaller in areas with more food, and males had larger HRs than females. In addition, more aggressive lizards tended to have larger HRs. Conspecific over-lap and number of individuals that a lizard interacted with (social network degree) had an interactive effect on HR size where individuals whose HRs overlapped more with neighbors had larger HRs, and this effect was particularly strong for individuals that interacted with more neighbors. HR fidelity declined over time (HR locations drifted from year to year), but individuals differed consistently in this rate of drift. The fact that HR size was consistent despite drifting locations suggests that lizard HRs reflect individual traits(e.g., habitat choice criteria that differ among individuals), rather than simple heterogeneity among sites. Overall, these findings demonstrate (1) both strong,long-term, within-individual consistency and between-individual differences in space use and (2) combined effects of individual traits, social conditions,and environmental characteristics on animal HRs, with implications fordiverse ecological processes.
Keywords: behavioral type
kernel density estimators
lizards
long-term field study
movement ecology
movement syndrome
personality
social network analysis
space use
telemetry
Description: First published: 24 March 2022
Rights: © 2022 The Ecological Society of America
DOI: 10.1002/ecm.1519
Grant ID: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP0877384
http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP130100145
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecm.1519
Appears in Collections:Animal and Veterinary Sciences publications

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