On the scaling of activity in tropical forest mammals
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Date
2020Author
Cid, Bruno
Carbone, Chris
Fernandez, Fernando A. S.
Jansen, Patrick A.
Rowcliffe, J. Marcus
O’Brien, Timothy
Akampurira, Emmanuel
Bitariho, Robert
Espinosa, Santiago
Gajapersad, Krishna
Santos, Thiago M. R.
Gonçalves, André L. S.
Kinnaird, Margaret F.
Lima, Marcela G. M.
Martin, Emanuel
Mugerwa, Badru
Rovero, Francesco
Salvador, Julia
Santos, Fernanda
Spironello, Wilson R.
Wijntuin, Soraya
Santos, Luiz Gustavo R. Oliveira
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Activity range - the amount of time spent active per day - is a fundamental aspect contributing to the optimization process by which animals achieve energetic balance. Based on their size and the nature of their diet, theoretical expectations are that larger carnivores need more time active to fulfil their energetic needs than do smaller ones and also more time active than similar-sized non-carnivores. Despite the relationship between daily activity, individual range and energy acquisition, large-scale relationships between activity range and body mass among wild mammals have never been properly addressed. This study aimed to understand the scaling of activity range with body mass, while controlling for phylogeny and diet. We build simple empirical predictions for the scaling of activity range with body mass for mammals of different trophic guilds and used a phylogenetically controlled mixed model to test these predictions using activity records of 249 mammal populations (128 species) in 19 tropical forests (in 15 countries). The empirical predictions showed a steeper scaling of activity range in carnivores (0.21) with higher levels of activity (higher intercept), and near-zero scaling in herbivores (0.04). Empirical data showed that
activity ranges scaled positively with body mass for carnivores (0.061), which also had higher intercept value, but not for herbivores, omnivores and insectivores, in general, corresponding with the predictions. Despite the many factors that shape animal activity at local scales, we found a general pattern showing that large carnivores need more time active in a day to meet their energetic demands.
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