4.5 Article

Using first-passage time to link behaviour and habitat in foraging paths of a terrestrial predator, the racoon

Journal

ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR
Volume 84, Issue 3, Pages 593-601

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2012.06.012

Keywords

area-restricted search; first-passage time; foraging; habitat use; Procyon lotor; racoon; searching behaviour; telemetry

Funding

  1. LDWF
  2. National Wild Turkey Federation (NWTF)
  3. Louisiana Chapter of NWTF
  4. School of Renewable Natural Resources at Louisiana State University (LSU)
  5. LSU Agricultural Center
  6. Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources at the University of Georgia

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An understanding of how animals alter their behaviour in relation to environmental conditions is a key element in the study of animal movement, foraging ecology and habitat use, and can provide valuable information for practical conservation and management applications. To exploit resources in heterogeneous landscapes optimally, foragers should intensively search in profitable patches while minimizing foraging activities in low-quality areas. We used first-passage time (FPT) analysis to identify and characterize area-restricted search (ARS) behaviour along the nightly movement paths of racoons. While FPT analysis has been successfully applied to a variety of pelagic species, our goal was to determine the ability of FPT to detect habitat characteristics associated with changes in searching behaviour for a terrestrial predator. Racoons, Procyon lotor, were tracked via radiotelemetry during their nightly movements. We found evidence of ARS behaviour in 55 of 58 paths, with racoons concentrating intensive searching bouts in areas with an average radius of 42.6 m (range 20-100 m). To test whether our detection of ARS represented an actual change in behaviour, we tracked five racoons in relation to an artificial food patch. We detected ARS behaviour during 9 of 10 occasions in which a tracked animal encountered the food patch. Racoons showed ARS behaviour in areas with abundant shallow water, and they moved quickly through openings and dry areas with sparse ground-level vegetation. Application of this method should prove useful for studies of habitat use and foraging ecology of terrestrial predators by providing links between animal movements and the environment. (C) 2012 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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