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Love thy neighbour: Feral buffalos show greater space use resource overlap and encounters during the wet season in the Northern Territory

机译:爱你的邻居:野牛在北领地的雨季表现出更大的空间利用、资源重叠和遭遇

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摘要

Managing feral water buffalo in the Northern Territory is a formidable challenge. As an introduced species, buffalo are associated with a myriad of biosecurity, economic, cultural and environmental issues ranging from overgrazing, decreased water quality, disease vectors to the destruction of cultural assets. Nevertheless, the buffalo are also a harvestable resource that can support economic development of the region. To mitigate some of the biosecurity, economic, cultural and environmental risks they pose and manage buffalo effectively, we need a detailed understanding of their spatial and behavioural ecology. However, several factors make understanding how best to manage the dense populations of wild individuals challenging as buffalo inhabit remote areas with limited infrastructure and accessibility and their large size and often aggressive nature can make them difficult to observe in otherwise inaccessible areas. GPS tracking allows for high‐frequency data collection and surveillance of individual buffalo. Here, we investigated how the different seasonal periods of a Northern Territory floodplain area shaped patterns of habitat use for 17 buffalo tracked over 16 months. We found in the dry season, buffalo space use is restricted, and the size of home ranges are significantly smaller than in the wet season. During the wet season, buffalo expand their home range area as well as their social encounter area with other buffalo. These differences in their space use and social patterns suggest that increased disease surveillance may be needed for the wet season when buffalo are more likely to share space and interact. During the dry season, however, buffalo movement is more predictable and restricted, suggesting greater optimisation opportunities for buffalo management. Results from these models can be used by land holders, Traditional Owners and wildlife managers to make evidence‐based decisions to improve buffalo management with respect to disease risk, sustainable harvest and damage to environmental and cultural assets.
机译:在北领地管理野生水牛是一项艰巨的挑战。作为一种外来物种,水牛与无数的生物安全、经济、文化和环境问题有关,包括过度放牧、水质下降、疾病媒介和文化资产的破坏。尽管如此,水牛也是一种可收获的资源,可以支持该地区的经济发展。为了减轻它们带来的一些生物安全、经济、文化和环境风险并有效管理水牛,我们需要详细了解它们的空间和行为生态学。然而,有几个因素使得了解如何最好地管理密集的野生个体种群具有挑战性,因为水牛栖息在基础设施和可达性的偏远地区,而且它们的体型大,而且通常具有攻击性,这使得它们很难在原本无法进入的地区进行观察。GPS 跟踪允许对每头水牛进行高频数据收集和监视。在这里,我们研究了北领地洪泛区的不同季节性时期如何影响 17 头水牛在 16 个月内的栖息地利用模式。我们发现在旱季,水牛的空间使用受到限制,家庭范围的大小明显小于雨季。在雨季,水牛扩大了它们的栖息地区域以及与其他水牛的社交接触区域。它们空间利用和社会模式的这些差异表明,在雨季,当水牛更有可能共享空间和互动时,可能需要加强疾病监测。然而,在旱季,水牛的移动更加可预测和受限,这表明水牛管理有更大的优化机会。土地所有者、传统所有者和野生动物管理者可以使用这些模型的结果来做出基于证据的决策,以改善水牛在疾病风险、可持续收获以及对环境和文化资产的损害方面的管理。

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