Behaviour influences thermoregulation of boreal moose during the warm season
Cold-adapted moose use behavioural responses to augment their ability to maintain body temperature while foraging in a warm environment. During the warm season, the hourly rate of change in moose rumen temperature is associated with movement rates that also vary by habitat. Abstract Management of la...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Conservation physiology 2021, Vol.9 (1), p.coaa130-coaa130 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cold-adapted moose use behavioural responses to augment their ability to maintain body temperature while foraging in a warm environment. During the warm season, the hourly rate of change in moose rumen temperature is associated with movement rates that also vary by habitat.
Abstract
Management of large herbivores depends on providing habitats for forage supply and refuge from risks of temperature, predation and disease. Moose (Alces alces) accumulate body energy and nutrient stores during summer, while reducing the impact of warm temperatures through physiological and behavioural thermoregulation. Building on the animal indicator concept, we used rumen temperature sensors and GPS collars on captive moose (n = 6) kept in large natural enclosures to evaluate how behaviour and habitat selection influence the rate of change in rumen temperature during the growing season on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, USA. We compared movement and habitat selection of individual females during tolerance days (daily amplitude in rumen temperature was ≥1.2°C in 24 h) with those of control days (daily amplitude in rumen temperature was 500 m • h−1). Additionally, the relationship between rate of change in rumen temperature and movement rate was different during tolerance and control days in open meadow and wetland habitats. In all habitats except wetlands, the rate of change in rumen temperature increased while resting, which probably is a result of diet-induced thermogenesis. Our study demonstrates that the behavioural choices of moose on the landscape are associated with the rate of change in rumen temperature and their ability to thermoregulate. Wildlife managers must consider high-value habitats where wildlife can employ both behavioural and physiological mechanisms to tolerate warm ambient conditions in a landscape of forage, predators and pests. |
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ISSN: | 2051-1434 2051-1434 |
DOI: | 10.1093/conphys/coaa130 |