Publication | Closed Access
Relating Body Size to the Rate of Home Range Use in Mammals
334
Citations
22
References
1988
Year
FitnessMovement EcologyHome Range UseAnthropometric IndicatorKinesiologyBody CompositionBody MassWildlife EcologyMammalogyTime ScaleHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyAnimal PerformanceAllometric StudyForagingBody SizePhysiologyEvolutionary BiologyHuman MovementHome RangeAnimal BehaviorSpatial Ecology
The area occupied or traversed by an aimal is a function of the time period considered, but few empirical estimates of the temporal component of home range use are available. We used a statistic called the "time to independence" to make an ecollogically meaningful estimate of the amount of time required for an individual to traverse its home range. Data from 23 species of terrestrial mammals indicated the existence of a size—dependent time scale governing the rate of home range use. Foraging mode influenced the rate of home range use; central place foragers traversed their home ranges approximately five times as rapidly as comparably sized noncentral place foragers. Numerous physiological measures of time are related to body mass raised to the 1/4 power. Our results suggest that the time scale governing the rate of space use by mammals is related similarly to body mass. This relationship permits a more critical examination of factors throught to influence home range size, including habitat prodictivity and social organization.
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