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Sett maintenance effort by different badgers
Journal
Animal
Behaviour, January 1999, vol. 57, no. 1,
pp.
153-161(9)
Authors
STEWART P.D.; BONESI L.; MACDONALD D.W. from the WildCRU at
Oxford University
Abstract
Group living has potential costs in terms of relative fitness for
individuals that invest effort in activities providing general
benefit, if other competing individuals exploit those activities and
accrue similar benefits at no cost. We examined the roles of
individual badgers, Meles meles, in the den maintenance
activities of digging and bedding collection at their communal setts. Twenty per cent of adults and yearlings were responsible for
60–90% of the observed digging and bedding collection effort.
Overall males tended to dig more than females, while durations of
bedding collection were similar. Among adult and yearling males and
females, individuals with a high percentage of days observed at the
sett (high site fidelity) performed more digging and collected more
bedding than transients and badgers of low site fidelity. Males of
high status (large, mature, frequently copulating individuals) were
more likely to dig than males of low status. Principal component
analysis indicated negligibly low correlation between status and
site fidelity for males. We hypothesize that while highly resident
adult females benefit from extending the sett to avoid direct
reproductive competition, males of high status and site fidelity
might extend the sett to encourage receptive breeding females in
their home group to stay and/or to improve survivorship of sired
litters. Other categories of individual depend on the sett for
shelter but, perhaps having less to gain from extending it, adopt a
less active role in sett maintenance.
Keywords
Copyright 1999 The
Association for the Study of Animal
Behaviour
Language:
English Document Type: Research article ISSN: 0003-3472
SICI (online): 0003-3472571153161
Publisher:Academic
Press
Web site
http://www.ingenta.com
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