HABITAT RICHNESS AFFECTS HOME-RANGE SIZE IN THE RED FOX VULPES-VULPES

Citation
M. Lucherini et S. Lovari, HABITAT RICHNESS AFFECTS HOME-RANGE SIZE IN THE RED FOX VULPES-VULPES, Behavioural processes, 36(1), 1996, pp. 103-105
Citations number
16
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology, Biological","Behavioral Sciences",Zoology
Journal title
ISSN journal
03766357
Volume
36
Issue
1
Year of publication
1996
Pages
103 - 105
Database
ISI
SICI code
0376-6357(1996)36:1<103:HRAHSI>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
The spatial behaviour of the red fox Vulpes vulpes shows a great flexi bility (Voigt and Macdonald, 1984). Home range size varies from 10 to over 5000 ha (Macdonald, 1987; Voigt, 1987). In carnivores, variations in home range size, weighed for body mass (Gittleman and Harvey, 1982 ), are largely related to differences in habitat productivity, but the intraspecific local variation in home range size can be only partiall y explained by differences in productivity. Macdonald (1981, 1983) sug gested that home range size and configuration were determined in the r ed fox by the dispersion of food-rich patches. More recently, it has b een found that (a) where humans are intolerant to the fox, resting sit es are often located peripherally in home ranges (Meia and Weber, 1993 ); (b) the ranging behaviour of red foxes cannot be explained only by the features of food resources in a complex environment with several p roductive habitats (Cavallini and Lovari, 1994); and (c) home range si ze may be directly related to the distance between rest sites and food patches (Lucherini et al., in press). In this paper, evidence for a s trong influence of habitat richness on home range size of the red fox is reported.