IIMYC   23581
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES MARINAS Y COSTERAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Scale dependency of Liolaemus lizards' home range in response to different environmental variables
Autor/es:
STELLATELLI OSCAR; VEGA LAURA; MORENO-AZOCAR DEBORA; CRUZ FÉLIX; BLOCK CAROLINA; ISACCH JUAN PABLO
Revista:
CURRENT ZOOLOGY
Editorial:
Editorial Office, Current Zoology
Referencias:
Lugar: Beijin; Año: 2016 vol. 2016 p. 1 - 10
ISSN:
1674-5507
Resumen:
Animal habitat use patterns cannot be isolated from scale issues. Consequently, multi-scale studies provide a complete characterization of ecological patterns that can further explain the observed variation. Liolaemus constitutes the world´s second most speciose lizard genus. In this study, we assessed the relationships between home range size and environmental variables at three different spatial scales. The study at a local and regional scale was focused on the habitat specialist Liolaemus multimaculatus. The lizard´s home range was calculated using the minimum convex For Review Only polygon method in populations from grassland sites of the coastal sand dunes of the Argentinean pampas under two different conditions, with or without forestations of Acacia longifolia. On the other hand, at a geographical scale we considered the evolutionary implications of twenty species of Liolaemus. Home range size, phylogeny, ecological, environmental and climatic data were obtained from literature and remote sensing. L. multimaculatus home range varied from 12.66 to 570.00 m. Regionally, this species had smaller home ranges in forested habitats (: 94.02 m) compared to the non-forested sites (: 219.78 m). Habitat structure, vegetation types, and food availability would explain the space use at finer scales. When the twenty species of Liolaemus were considered, high mean air temperature and broad thermal amplitudes showed an inverse relationship with home range size. Neither net primary productivity nor phylogeny were good predictors for home range variation at geographical scale. This study highlights the scale-dependence of the explicative capability of a set of environmental and intrinsic variables on home range patterns.