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Body mass explains characteristic scales of habitat selection in terrestrial mammals
Authors:Fisher Jason T  Anholt Brad  Volpe John P
Institution:1. Alberta Innovates – Technology Futures, Ecosystem Management Unit, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada;2. University of Victoria, Department of Biology. Victoria, British Columbia, Canada;3. University of Victoria, School of Environmental Studies. Victoria, British Columbia, Canada;4. Bamfield Marine Sciences Centre, Bamfield, British Columbia, Canada
Abstract:Niche theory in its various forms is based on those environmental factors that permit species persistence, but less work has focused on defining the extent, or size, of a species' environment: the area that explains a species' presence at a point in space. We proposed that this habitat extent is identifiable from a characteristic scale of habitat selection, the spatial scale at which habitat best explains species' occurrence. We hypothesized that this scale is predicted by body size. We tested this hypothesis on 12 sympatric terrestrial mammal species in the Canadian Rocky Mountains. For each species, habitat models varied across the 20 spatial scales tested. For six species, we found a characteristic scale; this scale was explained by species' body mass in a quadratic relationship. Habitat measured at large scales best-predicted habitat selection in both large and small species, and small scales predict habitat extent in medium-sized species. The relationship between body size and habitat selection scale implies evolutionary adaptation to landscape heterogeneity as the driver of scale-dependent habitat selection.
Keywords:Allometry  Habitat complexity  Spatial scale  Textural‐discontinuity
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