4.6 Article

Brown bear communication hubs: patterns and correlates of tree rubbing and pedal marking at a long-term marking site

期刊

PEERJ
卷 9, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.10447

关键词

Ursus arctos; Marking behaviour; Scent marking; Chemical communication; Tree marking

资金

  1. AEI/FEDER EU [CGL2017-83045-R]
  2. Agencia Estatal de Investigacion from the Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness, Spain
  3. FEDER
  4. Principado de Asturias-Consejeria de Agroganaderia y Recursos Autoctonos [20166422]
  5. National Centre for Research and Development (GLOBE) [POL-NOR/198352/85/2013]
  6. National Science Centre in Poland [BearConnect BiodivERsA 2016/22/Z/NZ8/00121, DEC-2013/08/M/NZ9/00469]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Chemical communication is essential for brown bears, as they utilize glands and pedal marks to convey information at specific marking sites. Gender and age play different roles in this process, with adult males being the primary performers of marking behaviors. Behavior associations and repeated marking contribute to the establishment of long-term communication hubs at marking sites.
Chemical communication is important for many species of mammals. Male brown bears, Ursus arctos, mark trees with a secretion from glands located on their back. The recent discovery of pedal glands and pedal-marking at a site used for tree-rubbing led us to hypothesize that both types of marking form part of a more complex communication system. We describe the patterns of chemical communication used by different age and sex classes, including differences in the roles of these classes as information providers or receivers over four years at a long-term marking site. Using video recordings from a camera trap, we registered a total of 285 bear-visits and 419 behavioral events associated with chemical communication. Bears visited the site more frequently during the mating season, during which communication behaviors were more frequent. A typical visit by male bears consisted of sniffing the depressions where animals pedal mark, performing pedal-marking, sniffing the tree, and, finally, rubbing against the trunk of the tree. Adult males performed most pedal- and tree-marking (95% and 66% of the cases, respectively). Males pedal-marked and tree-rubbed in 81% and 48% of their visits and sniffed the pedal marks and the tree in 23% and 59% of visits, respectively. Adult females never pedal marked, and juveniles did so at very low frequencies. Females rubbed against the tree in just 9% of their visits; they sniffed the tree and the pedal marks in 51% and 21% of their visits, respectively. All sex and age classes performed pedal-and tree-sniffing. There were significant associations between behaviors indicating that different behaviors tended to occur during the same visit and were more likely if another individual had recently visited. These associations leading to repeated marking of the site can promote the establishment of long-term marking sites. Marking sites defined by trees and the trails leading to them seem to act as communication hubs that brown bears use to share and obtain important information at population level.

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