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Accounting for behaviour in fine-scale habitat selection: A case study highlighting methodological intricacies. / Beumer, L.T.; Schmidt, N.M.; Pohle, J. et al.
In: Journal of Animal Ecology, Vol. 92, No. 10, 01.10.2023, p. 1937-1953.

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Beumer, LT, Schmidt, NM, Pohle, J, Signer, J, Chimienti, M, Desforges, J-P, Hansen, LH, Pedersen, SH, Rudd, DA, Stelvig, M & van Beest, FM 2023, 'Accounting for behaviour in fine-scale habitat selection: A case study highlighting methodological intricacies', Journal of Animal Ecology, vol. 92, no. 10, pp. 1937-1953. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13984

APA

Beumer, L. T., Schmidt, N. M., Pohle, J., Signer, J., Chimienti, M., Desforges, J.-P., Hansen, L. H., Pedersen, S. H., Rudd, D. A., Stelvig, M., & van Beest, F. M. (2023). Accounting for behaviour in fine-scale habitat selection: A case study highlighting methodological intricacies. Journal of Animal Ecology, 92(10), 1937-1953. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13984

CBE

Beumer LT, Schmidt NM, Pohle J, Signer J, Chimienti M, Desforges J-P, Hansen LH, Pedersen SH, Rudd DA, Stelvig M, et al. 2023. Accounting for behaviour in fine-scale habitat selection: A case study highlighting methodological intricacies. Journal of Animal Ecology. 92(10):1937-1953. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13984

MLA

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Beumer LT, Schmidt NM, Pohle J, Signer J, Chimienti M, Desforges JP et al. Accounting for behaviour in fine-scale habitat selection: A case study highlighting methodological intricacies. Journal of Animal Ecology. 2023 Oct 1;92(10):1937-1953. Epub 2023 Jul 16. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13984

Author

Beumer, L.T. ; Schmidt, N.M. ; Pohle, J. et al. / Accounting for behaviour in fine-scale habitat selection: A case study highlighting methodological intricacies. In: Journal of Animal Ecology. 2023 ; Vol. 92, No. 10. pp. 1937-1953.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Accounting for behaviour in fine-scale habitat selection: A case study highlighting methodological intricacies

AU - Beumer, L.T.

AU - Schmidt, N.M.

AU - Pohle, J.

AU - Signer, J.

AU - Chimienti, Marianna

AU - Desforges, J-P

AU - Hansen, L.H.

AU - Pedersen, S.H.

AU - Rudd, D.A.

AU - Stelvig, M.

AU - van Beest, F.M.

PY - 2023/10/1

Y1 - 2023/10/1

N2 - Animal habitat selection—central in both theoretical and applied ecology—may depend on behavioural motivations such as foraging, predator avoidance, and thermoregulation. Step-selection functions (SSFs) enable assessment of fine-scale habitat selection as a function of an animal's movement capacities and spatiotemporal variation in extrinsic conditions.If animal location data can be associated with behaviour, SSFs are an intuitive approach to quantify behaviour-specific habitat selection. Fitting SSFs separately for distinct behavioural states helped to uncover state-specific selection patterns. However, while the definition of the availability domain has been highlighted as the most critical aspect of SSFs, the influence of accounting for behaviour in the use-availability design has not been quantified yet.Using a predator-free population of high-arctic muskoxen Ovibos moschatus as a case study, we aimed to evaluate how (1) defining behaviour-specific availability domains, and/or (2) fitting separate behaviour-specific models impacts (a) model structure, (b) estimated selection coefficients and (c) model predictive performance as opposed to behaviour-unspecific approaches. To do so, we first applied hidden Markov models to infer different behavioural modes (resting, foraging, relocating) from hourly GPS positions (19 individuals, 153–1062 observation days/animal). Using SSFs, we then compared behaviour-specific versus behaviour-unspecific habitat selection in relation to terrain features, vegetation and snow conditions.Our results show that incorporating behaviour into the definition of the availability domain primarily impacts model structure (i.e. variable selection), whereas fitting separate behaviour-specific models mainly influences selection strength. Behaviour-specific availability domains improved predictive performance for foraging and relocating models (i.e. behaviours with medium to large spatial displacement), but decreased performance for resting models. Thus, even for a predator-free population subject to only negligible interspecific competition and human disturbance we found that accounting for behaviour in SSFs impacted model structure, selection coefficients and predictive performance.Our results indicate that for robust inference, both a behaviour-specific availability domain and behaviour-specific model fitting should be explored, especially for populations where strong spatiotemporal selection trade-offs are expected. This is particularly critical if wildlife habitat preferences are estimated to inform management and conservation initiatives.

AB - Animal habitat selection—central in both theoretical and applied ecology—may depend on behavioural motivations such as foraging, predator avoidance, and thermoregulation. Step-selection functions (SSFs) enable assessment of fine-scale habitat selection as a function of an animal's movement capacities and spatiotemporal variation in extrinsic conditions.If animal location data can be associated with behaviour, SSFs are an intuitive approach to quantify behaviour-specific habitat selection. Fitting SSFs separately for distinct behavioural states helped to uncover state-specific selection patterns. However, while the definition of the availability domain has been highlighted as the most critical aspect of SSFs, the influence of accounting for behaviour in the use-availability design has not been quantified yet.Using a predator-free population of high-arctic muskoxen Ovibos moschatus as a case study, we aimed to evaluate how (1) defining behaviour-specific availability domains, and/or (2) fitting separate behaviour-specific models impacts (a) model structure, (b) estimated selection coefficients and (c) model predictive performance as opposed to behaviour-unspecific approaches. To do so, we first applied hidden Markov models to infer different behavioural modes (resting, foraging, relocating) from hourly GPS positions (19 individuals, 153–1062 observation days/animal). Using SSFs, we then compared behaviour-specific versus behaviour-unspecific habitat selection in relation to terrain features, vegetation and snow conditions.Our results show that incorporating behaviour into the definition of the availability domain primarily impacts model structure (i.e. variable selection), whereas fitting separate behaviour-specific models mainly influences selection strength. Behaviour-specific availability domains improved predictive performance for foraging and relocating models (i.e. behaviours with medium to large spatial displacement), but decreased performance for resting models. Thus, even for a predator-free population subject to only negligible interspecific competition and human disturbance we found that accounting for behaviour in SSFs impacted model structure, selection coefficients and predictive performance.Our results indicate that for robust inference, both a behaviour-specific availability domain and behaviour-specific model fitting should be explored, especially for populations where strong spatiotemporal selection trade-offs are expected. This is particularly critical if wildlife habitat preferences are estimated to inform management and conservation initiatives.

U2 - 10.1111/1365-2656.13984

DO - 10.1111/1365-2656.13984

M3 - Article

VL - 92

SP - 1937

EP - 1953

JO - Journal of Animal Ecology

JF - Journal of Animal Ecology

SN - 0021-8790

IS - 10

ER -