Habitat selection by Akodon azarae and Calomys laucha (Rodentia, Muridae) in pampean agroecosystems

Habitat selection is viewed as a hierarchical process, in which scaling effects may be expressed at both biological levels and spatial scales. Different animal species may differ in their perception of habitat heterogeneity, thus differing in their scales of habitat selection, which may favour coexi...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Busch, M., Mino, M.H., Dadon, J.R., Hodara, K.
Formato: JOUR
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00251461_v65_n1_p29_Busch
Aporte de:
id todo:paper_00251461_v65_n1_p29_Busch
record_format dspace
spelling todo:paper_00251461_v65_n1_p29_Busch2023-10-03T14:35:30Z Habitat selection by Akodon azarae and Calomys laucha (Rodentia, Muridae) in pampean agroecosystems Busch, M. Mino, M.H. Dadon, J.R. Hodara, K. Argentina Ecology Habitat Rodents agroecology habitat selection hierarchical system rodent Akodon azarae Akodon azarae Animalia Calomys laucha Calomys laucha Calomys musculinus Calomys musculinus Cavia aperea Cavia aperea Cavia porcellus Muridae Mus musculus Mus musculus Musculus Oligoryzomys flavescens Oligoryzomys flavescens Oryzomys Rodentia Sus scrofa Viridiplantae Habitat selection is viewed as a hierarchical process, in which scaling effects may be expressed at both biological levels and spatial scales. Different animal species may differ in their perception of habitat heterogeneity, thus differing in their scales of habitat selection, which may favour coexistence. The hypothesis of the present work was that the hierarchical structure of habitat heterogeneity of the pampean agroecosystems is perceived differentially by two small rodent species. The study area mainly consists of crop and pasture fields, surrounded by weedy margins less disturbed by agricultural labours (borders). Small rodents that inhabit these habitats are Akodon azarae (Fischer), Calomys laucha (Olfers), Calomys musculinus (Thomas), Oligoryzomys flavescens (Oryzomys: Waterhouse), Cavia aperea (Thomas) and Mus musculus (Waterhouse). Our goal was to study habitat selection by the two most abundant rodent species (Calomy laucha and Akodon azarae) at different spatial scales and to identify those variables that influence habitat selection. We compared the number of rodent captures among habitat units defined at four different scales. Capture-Mark-Recapture samplings were conducted at winter 1993, spring 1993, early autumn 1994 and early winter 1994. At each trapping session, we registered the number and location of A. azarae and C. laucha captures. At each trap site we recorded the total and green plant cover, height of the vegetation and dominant plant species. According to our results, habitat selection by A. azarae and C. laucha was stronger at macrohabitat and microhabitat levels than at intermediate scales. Plant cover, as well as individual plant species, influenced habitat selection of these rodent species. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00251461_v65_n1_p29_Busch
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Argentina
Ecology
Habitat
Rodents
agroecology
habitat selection
hierarchical system
rodent
Akodon azarae
Akodon azarae
Animalia
Calomys laucha
Calomys laucha
Calomys musculinus
Calomys musculinus
Cavia aperea
Cavia aperea
Cavia porcellus
Muridae
Mus musculus
Mus musculus
Musculus
Oligoryzomys flavescens
Oligoryzomys flavescens
Oryzomys
Rodentia
Sus scrofa
Viridiplantae
spellingShingle Argentina
Ecology
Habitat
Rodents
agroecology
habitat selection
hierarchical system
rodent
Akodon azarae
Akodon azarae
Animalia
Calomys laucha
Calomys laucha
Calomys musculinus
Calomys musculinus
Cavia aperea
Cavia aperea
Cavia porcellus
Muridae
Mus musculus
Mus musculus
Musculus
Oligoryzomys flavescens
Oligoryzomys flavescens
Oryzomys
Rodentia
Sus scrofa
Viridiplantae
Busch, M.
Mino, M.H.
Dadon, J.R.
Hodara, K.
Habitat selection by Akodon azarae and Calomys laucha (Rodentia, Muridae) in pampean agroecosystems
topic_facet Argentina
Ecology
Habitat
Rodents
agroecology
habitat selection
hierarchical system
rodent
Akodon azarae
Akodon azarae
Animalia
Calomys laucha
Calomys laucha
Calomys musculinus
Calomys musculinus
Cavia aperea
Cavia aperea
Cavia porcellus
Muridae
Mus musculus
Mus musculus
Musculus
Oligoryzomys flavescens
Oligoryzomys flavescens
Oryzomys
Rodentia
Sus scrofa
Viridiplantae
description Habitat selection is viewed as a hierarchical process, in which scaling effects may be expressed at both biological levels and spatial scales. Different animal species may differ in their perception of habitat heterogeneity, thus differing in their scales of habitat selection, which may favour coexistence. The hypothesis of the present work was that the hierarchical structure of habitat heterogeneity of the pampean agroecosystems is perceived differentially by two small rodent species. The study area mainly consists of crop and pasture fields, surrounded by weedy margins less disturbed by agricultural labours (borders). Small rodents that inhabit these habitats are Akodon azarae (Fischer), Calomys laucha (Olfers), Calomys musculinus (Thomas), Oligoryzomys flavescens (Oryzomys: Waterhouse), Cavia aperea (Thomas) and Mus musculus (Waterhouse). Our goal was to study habitat selection by the two most abundant rodent species (Calomy laucha and Akodon azarae) at different spatial scales and to identify those variables that influence habitat selection. We compared the number of rodent captures among habitat units defined at four different scales. Capture-Mark-Recapture samplings were conducted at winter 1993, spring 1993, early autumn 1994 and early winter 1994. At each trapping session, we registered the number and location of A. azarae and C. laucha captures. At each trap site we recorded the total and green plant cover, height of the vegetation and dominant plant species. According to our results, habitat selection by A. azarae and C. laucha was stronger at macrohabitat and microhabitat levels than at intermediate scales. Plant cover, as well as individual plant species, influenced habitat selection of these rodent species.
format JOUR
author Busch, M.
Mino, M.H.
Dadon, J.R.
Hodara, K.
author_facet Busch, M.
Mino, M.H.
Dadon, J.R.
Hodara, K.
author_sort Busch, M.
title Habitat selection by Akodon azarae and Calomys laucha (Rodentia, Muridae) in pampean agroecosystems
title_short Habitat selection by Akodon azarae and Calomys laucha (Rodentia, Muridae) in pampean agroecosystems
title_full Habitat selection by Akodon azarae and Calomys laucha (Rodentia, Muridae) in pampean agroecosystems
title_fullStr Habitat selection by Akodon azarae and Calomys laucha (Rodentia, Muridae) in pampean agroecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Habitat selection by Akodon azarae and Calomys laucha (Rodentia, Muridae) in pampean agroecosystems
title_sort habitat selection by akodon azarae and calomys laucha (rodentia, muridae) in pampean agroecosystems
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00251461_v65_n1_p29_Busch
work_keys_str_mv AT buschm habitatselectionbyakodonazaraeandcalomyslaucharodentiamuridaeinpampeanagroecosystems
AT minomh habitatselectionbyakodonazaraeandcalomyslaucharodentiamuridaeinpampeanagroecosystems
AT dadonjr habitatselectionbyakodonazaraeandcalomyslaucharodentiamuridaeinpampeanagroecosystems
AT hodarak habitatselectionbyakodonazaraeandcalomyslaucharodentiamuridaeinpampeanagroecosystems
_version_ 1807322334467457024