Effects of body size on estimation of mammalian area requirements
Average rating
Cast your vote
You can rate an item by clicking the amount of stars they wish to award to this item.
When enough users have cast their vote on this item, the average rating will also be shown.
Star rating
Your vote was cast
Thank you for your feedback
Thank you for your feedback
Date Issued
2020Author
Noonan, Michael J.Fleming, Christen H.
Tucker, Marlee A.
Kays, Roland
Harrison, Autumn-Lynn
Crofoot, Margaret C.
Abrahms, Briana
Alberts, Susan C.
Ali, Abdullahi H.
Altmann, Jeanne
Antunes, Pamela Castro
Attias, Nina
Belant, Jerrold L.
Beyer, Dean E.
Bidner, Laura R.
Blaum, Niels
Boone, Randall B.
Caillaud, Damien
Paula, Rogerio Cunha
la Torre, J. Antonio
Dekker, Jasja
DePerno, Christopher S.
Farhadinia, Mohammad
Fennessy, Julian
Fichtel, Claudia
Fischer, Christina
Ford, Adam
Goheen, Jacob R.
Havmøller, Rasmus W.
Hirsch, Ben T.
Hurtado, Cindy
Isbell, Lynne A.
Janssen, René
Jeltsch, Florian
Kaczensky, Petra
Kaneko, Yayoi
Kappeler, Peter
Katna, Anjan
Kauffman, Matthew
Koch, Flavia
Kulkarni, Abhijeet
LaPoint, Scott
Leimgruber, Peter
Macdonald, David W.
Markham, A. Catherine
McMahon, Laura
Mertes, Katherine
Moorman, Christopher E.
Morato, Ronaldo G.
Moßbrucker, Alexander M.
Mourão, Guilherme
O'Connor, David
Oliveira-Santos, Luiz Gustavo R.
Pastorini, Jennifer
Patterson, Bruce D.
Rachlow, Janet
Ranglack, Dustin H.
Reid, Neil
Scantlebury, David M.
Scott, Dawn M
Selva, Nuria
Sergiel, Agnieszka
Songer, Melissa
Songsasen, Nucharin
Stabach, Jared A.
Stacy-Dawes, Jenna
Swingen, Morgan B.
Thompson, Jeffrey J
Ullmann, Wiebke
Vanak, Abi Tamim
Thaker, Maria
Wilson, John W.
Yamazaki, Koji
Yarnell, Richard W.
Zieba, Filip
Zwijacz-Kozica, Tomasz
Fagan, William F.
Mueller, Thomas
Calabrese, Justin M.
Journal
Conservation BiologyVolume
34Issue
4Start page
1017End page
1028
Metadata
Show full item recordAlternative link
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/cobi.13495Abstract
Accurately quantifying species’ area requirements is a prerequisite for effective area‐based conservation. This typically involves collecting tracking data on species of interest and then conducting home‐range analyses. Problematically, autocorrelation in tracking data can result in space needs being severely underestimated. Based on the previous work, we hypothesized the magnitude of underestimation varies with body mass, a relationship that could have serious conservation implications. To evaluate this hypothesis for terrestrial mammals, we estimated home‐range areas with global positioning system (GPS) locations from 757 individuals across 61 globally distributed mammalian species with body masses ranging from 0.4 to 4000 kg. We then applied block cross‐validation to quantify bias in empirical home‐range estimates. Area requirements of mammals <10 kg were underestimated by a mean approximately15%, and species weighing approximately100 kg were underestimated by approximately50% on average. Thus, we found area estimation was subject to autocorrelation‐induced bias that was worse for large species. Combined with the fact that extinction risk increases as body mass increases, the allometric scaling of bias we observed suggests the most threatened species are also likely to be those with the least accurate home‐range estimates. As a correction, we tested whether data thinning or autocorrelation‐informed home‐range estimation minimized the scaling effect of autocorrelation on area estimates. Data thinning required an approximately93% data loss to achieve statistical independence with 95% confidence and was, therefore, not a viable solution. In contrast, autocorrelation‐informed home‐range estimation resulted in consistently accurate estimates irrespective of mass. When relating body mass to home range size, we detected that correcting for autocorrelation resulted in a scaling exponent significantly >1, meaning the scaling of the relationship changed substantially at the upper end of the mass spectrum.Type
ArticleRights
© 2020 The Authors. Conservation Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Conservation Biologyae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1111/cobi.13495
Scopus Count
Collections
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as © 2020 The Authors. Conservation Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology