Young But Not Old Adult African Striped Mice Reduce Their Activity in the Dry Season When Food Availability is Low

An individual′s survival and fitness depend on its ability to effectively allocate its time between competing behaviors. Sex, social tactic, season and food availability are important factors influencing activity budgets. However, few field studies have tested their influences. The African striped m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied animal ethology 2016-10, Vol.122 (10), p.828-840
Hauptverfasser: Rimbach, Rebecca, Willigenburg, Remco, Schoepf, Ivana, Yuen, Chi Hang, Pillay, Neville, Schradin, Carsten
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container_end_page 840
container_issue 10
container_start_page 828
container_title Applied animal ethology
container_volume 122
creator Rimbach, Rebecca
Willigenburg, Remco
Schoepf, Ivana
Yuen, Chi Hang
Pillay, Neville
Schradin, Carsten
description An individual′s survival and fitness depend on its ability to effectively allocate its time between competing behaviors. Sex, social tactic, season and food availability are important factors influencing activity budgets. However, few field studies have tested their influences. The African striped mouse (Rhabdomys pumilio) lives in highly seasonal habitats in southern Africa, and individuals can adopt different social tactics. We investigated seasonal changes in activity budgets of different tactics and predicted that individuals will reduce their activity in the non‐breeding season to save energy when food availability is low and that young non‐breeding adults (‘philopatrics’) invest mainly in activities related to gaining body mass to increase survival probability. We predicted old adults (‘breeders’), which bred during the previous breeding season, to invest mainly in maintenance of their social status. We conducted 90 focal observations during the non‐breeding season and 73 during the breeding season. Activity budgets of striped mice were season and tactic specific, with philopatrics, but not breeders, reducing activity when food availability was low, possibly to decrease energy expenditure. Philopatrics of both sexes foraged and basked more in the breeding season than during the non‐breeding season. Male philopatrics gained body mass and female philopatrics maintained their body mass in both seasons. Sex‐specific differences occurred during the breeding season, when female breeders foraged more than male breeders, while male breeders chased other individuals more than female breeders. These findings indicate that individuals adopting different social tactics display distinct behaviors to fulfill tactic‐specific energetic needs.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/eth.12527
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Activity budgets of striped mice were season and tactic specific, with philopatrics, but not breeders, reducing activity when food availability was low, possibly to decrease energy expenditure. Philopatrics of both sexes foraged and basked more in the breeding season than during the non‐breeding season. Male philopatrics gained body mass and female philopatrics maintained their body mass in both seasons. Sex‐specific differences occurred during the breeding season, when female breeders foraged more than male breeders, while male breeders chased other individuals more than female breeders. 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subjects activity patterns
Animal behavior
Animal reproduction
Breeding seasons
Dry season
energy expenditure
Environmental Sciences
Food
Food availability
Forage
maturation
Rhabdomys pumilio
Rodents
Seasons
Sexual behavior
time allocation
title Young But Not Old Adult African Striped Mice Reduce Their Activity in the Dry Season When Food Availability is Low
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