4.2 Article

Factors affecting home range size and overlap in Calomys venustus (Muridae : Sigmodontinae) in Argentine agroecosystems

Journal

MAMMALIAN BIOLOGY
Volume 67, Issue 2, Pages 97-104

Publisher

URBAN & FISCHER VERLAG
DOI: 10.1078/1616-5047-00014

Keywords

Calomys venustus; spatial organization; population density; Argentine agroecosystems

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In this study, information concerning home range size and overlap of Calomys venustus (Thomas, 1894), in relation to sex, population size, and breeding periods is provided. The present study was carded out on a railway bank in southern Cordoba Province (Argentina), between October 1994 and September 1997, using the capture-mark-recapture method. Home range size in C. venustus depended on breeding period and population size, and was independent of sex. The degree of home range overlap was dependent on breeding and non-breeding periods; and overlap type (intra-or intersexual), but was independent of population density. During the breeding period, females showed a small degree of intrasexual home range overlap. In general, male home ranges largely overlapped with females. The conclusion is that differences in home range size of C. ventustus could be determined by season and population size. Moreover, the degree of inter- and intrasexual home range overlap during the breeding period suggested that mates and females of C. venustus use space differently. Females did not share their home range with other females, while mates fully shared it with both sexes, and male spacing is influenced by female distribution.

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