Daily traveled distances by the white-tailed deer in relation to seasonality and reproductive phenology in a tropical lowland of southeastern Mexico

The white-tailed deer is the most widely hunted species in the tropical areas of Mexico. However, the information about how the environmental conditions and the physiological status of individuals influenced the movement of this species is practically unknown, even this will help to understand how this species could be affected by the changes that are already occurring in these areas. This study describes the daily movements of five female white-tailed deer, marked with radio satellite collars, and followed for 1 year in a tropical lowland area of Mexico. We compared the daily traveled distances per deer during the year and according to the environmental temperature and reproductive phenology of the individuals. We found that the average daily distance traveled during the year was 1044.06 m (SD ± 501.00 m), with the longest daily movements occurring during the dry season and shorter movements during the wet season. Temperature showed no influence on daily movements, but it is likely that the fawning season and food shortages would during the dry season influence the longest daily movements of the deer. On the other side, the reduced daily traveled distances during the wet season indicate that the flooding season affected the movement of the deer. The continuation of studies on the movement ecology of the species would help us to clarify how this species will adapt to the climate change scenarios in the tropical lowlands of Mexico, where longer flooding seasons with contrasting extreme drought are expected.

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Main Authors: Contreras Moreno, Fernando Marcos Doctor 21708, Hidalgo Mihart, Mircea Gabriel autor 14766, Contreras Sánchez, Wilfrido Miguel autor 14140
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Tayassu pecari, Preferencias de hábitat, Conducta espacial en los animales, Población animal, Bosques tropicales, Artfrosur,
Online Access:https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-03463-4_8
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:621782023-07-05T17:01:24ZDaily traveled distances by the white-tailed deer in relation to seasonality and reproductive phenology in a tropical lowland of southeastern Mexico Contreras Moreno, Fernando Marcos Doctor 21708 Hidalgo Mihart, Mircea Gabriel autor 14766 Contreras Sánchez, Wilfrido Miguel autor 14140 textengThe white-tailed deer is the most widely hunted species in the tropical areas of Mexico. However, the information about how the environmental conditions and the physiological status of individuals influenced the movement of this species is practically unknown, even this will help to understand how this species could be affected by the changes that are already occurring in these areas. This study describes the daily movements of five female white-tailed deer, marked with radio satellite collars, and followed for 1 year in a tropical lowland area of Mexico. We compared the daily traveled distances per deer during the year and according to the environmental temperature and reproductive phenology of the individuals. We found that the average daily distance traveled during the year was 1044.06 m (SD ± 501.00 m), with the longest daily movements occurring during the dry season and shorter movements during the wet season. Temperature showed no influence on daily movements, but it is likely that the fawning season and food shortages would during the dry season influence the longest daily movements of the deer. On the other side, the reduced daily traveled distances during the wet season indicate that the flooding season affected the movement of the deer. The continuation of studies on the movement ecology of the species would help us to clarify how this species will adapt to the climate change scenarios in the tropical lowlands of Mexico, where longer flooding seasons with contrasting extreme drought are expected.The white-tailed deer is the most widely hunted species in the tropical areas of Mexico. However, the information about how the environmental conditions and the physiological status of individuals influenced the movement of this species is practically unknown, even this will help to understand how this species could be affected by the changes that are already occurring in these areas. This study describes the daily movements of five female white-tailed deer, marked with radio satellite collars, and followed for 1 year in a tropical lowland area of Mexico. We compared the daily traveled distances per deer during the year and according to the environmental temperature and reproductive phenology of the individuals. We found that the average daily distance traveled during the year was 1044.06 m (SD ± 501.00 m), with the longest daily movements occurring during the dry season and shorter movements during the wet season. Temperature showed no influence on daily movements, but it is likely that the fawning season and food shortages would during the dry season influence the longest daily movements of the deer. On the other side, the reduced daily traveled distances during the wet season indicate that the flooding season affected the movement of the deer. The continuation of studies on the movement ecology of the species would help us to clarify how this species will adapt to the climate change scenarios in the tropical lowlands of Mexico, where longer flooding seasons with contrasting extreme drought are expected.Tayassu pecariPreferencias de hábitatConducta espacial en los animalesPoblación animalBosques tropicalesArtfrosurMovement ecology of neotropical forest mammals: focus on social animals / Rafael Reyna-Hurtado, Colin A. Chapman, editorshttps://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-03463-4_8Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Tayassu pecari
Preferencias de hábitat
Conducta espacial en los animales
Población animal
Bosques tropicales
Artfrosur
Tayassu pecari
Preferencias de hábitat
Conducta espacial en los animales
Población animal
Bosques tropicales
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Tayassu pecari
Preferencias de hábitat
Conducta espacial en los animales
Población animal
Bosques tropicales
Artfrosur
Tayassu pecari
Preferencias de hábitat
Conducta espacial en los animales
Población animal
Bosques tropicales
Artfrosur
Contreras Moreno, Fernando Marcos Doctor 21708
Hidalgo Mihart, Mircea Gabriel autor 14766
Contreras Sánchez, Wilfrido Miguel autor 14140
Daily traveled distances by the white-tailed deer in relation to seasonality and reproductive phenology in a tropical lowland of southeastern Mexico
description The white-tailed deer is the most widely hunted species in the tropical areas of Mexico. However, the information about how the environmental conditions and the physiological status of individuals influenced the movement of this species is practically unknown, even this will help to understand how this species could be affected by the changes that are already occurring in these areas. This study describes the daily movements of five female white-tailed deer, marked with radio satellite collars, and followed for 1 year in a tropical lowland area of Mexico. We compared the daily traveled distances per deer during the year and according to the environmental temperature and reproductive phenology of the individuals. We found that the average daily distance traveled during the year was 1044.06 m (SD ± 501.00 m), with the longest daily movements occurring during the dry season and shorter movements during the wet season. Temperature showed no influence on daily movements, but it is likely that the fawning season and food shortages would during the dry season influence the longest daily movements of the deer. On the other side, the reduced daily traveled distances during the wet season indicate that the flooding season affected the movement of the deer. The continuation of studies on the movement ecology of the species would help us to clarify how this species will adapt to the climate change scenarios in the tropical lowlands of Mexico, where longer flooding seasons with contrasting extreme drought are expected.
format Texto
topic_facet Tayassu pecari
Preferencias de hábitat
Conducta espacial en los animales
Población animal
Bosques tropicales
Artfrosur
author Contreras Moreno, Fernando Marcos Doctor 21708
Hidalgo Mihart, Mircea Gabriel autor 14766
Contreras Sánchez, Wilfrido Miguel autor 14140
author_facet Contreras Moreno, Fernando Marcos Doctor 21708
Hidalgo Mihart, Mircea Gabriel autor 14766
Contreras Sánchez, Wilfrido Miguel autor 14140
author_sort Contreras Moreno, Fernando Marcos Doctor 21708
title Daily traveled distances by the white-tailed deer in relation to seasonality and reproductive phenology in a tropical lowland of southeastern Mexico
title_short Daily traveled distances by the white-tailed deer in relation to seasonality and reproductive phenology in a tropical lowland of southeastern Mexico
title_full Daily traveled distances by the white-tailed deer in relation to seasonality and reproductive phenology in a tropical lowland of southeastern Mexico
title_fullStr Daily traveled distances by the white-tailed deer in relation to seasonality and reproductive phenology in a tropical lowland of southeastern Mexico
title_full_unstemmed Daily traveled distances by the white-tailed deer in relation to seasonality and reproductive phenology in a tropical lowland of southeastern Mexico
title_sort daily traveled distances by the white-tailed deer in relation to seasonality and reproductive phenology in a tropical lowland of southeastern mexico
url https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-03463-4_8
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