» Articles » PMID: 26790111

Behavioural Flexibility in Migratory Behaviour in a Long-lived Large Herbivore

Overview
Journal J Anim Ecol
Date 2016 Jan 21
PMID 26790111
Citations 28
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Migratory animals are predicted to enhance lifetime fitness by obtaining higher quality forage and/or reducing predation risk compared to non-migratory conspecifics. Despite evidence for behavioural flexibility in other taxa, previous research on large mammals has often assumed that migratory behaviour is a fixed behavioural trait. Migratory behaviour may be plastic for many species, although few studies have tested for individual-level flexibility using long-term monitoring of marked individuals, especially in large mammals such as ungulates. We tested variability in individual migratory behaviour using a 10-year telemetry data set of 223 adult female elk (Cervus elaphus) in the partially migratory Ya Ha Tinda population in Alberta, Canada. We used net squared displacement (NSD) to classify migratory strategy for each individual elk-year. Individuals switched between migrant and resident strategies at a mean rate of 15% per year, and migrants were more likely to switch than residents. We then tested how extrinsic (climate, elk/wolf abundance) and intrinsic (age) factors affected the probability of migrating, and, secondly, the decision to switch between migratory strategies. Over 630 individual elk-years, the probability of an individual elk migrating increased following a severe winter, in years of higher wolf abundance, and with increasing age. At an individual elk level, we observed 148 switching events of 430 possible transitions in elk monitored at least 2 years. We found switching was density-dependent, where migrants switched to a resident strategy at low elk abundance, but residents switched more to a migrant strategy at high elk abundance. Precipitation during the previous summer had a weak carryover effect, with migrants switching slightly more following wetter summers, whereas residents showed the opposite pattern. Older migrant elk rarely switched, whereas resident elk switched more frequently to migrate at older ages. Our results show migratory behaviour in ungulates is an individually variable trait that can respond to intrinsic, environmental and density-dependent forces. Different strategies had opposing responses to density-dependent and intrinsic drivers, providing a stabilizing mechanism for the maintenance of partial migration and demographic fitness in this population.

Citing Articles

Hierarchy in Structuring of Resource Selection: Understanding Elk Selection Across Space, Time, and Movement Strategies.

Crews S, Rayl N, Alldredge M, Bergman E, Anderson Jr C, VanNatta E Ecol Evol. 2025; 15(3):e71097.

PMID: 40046846 PMC: 11882307. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.71097.


Modular switches shift monarch butterfly migratory flight behavior at their Mexican overwintering sites.

Green 2nd D, Polidori S, Stratton S iScience. 2024; 27(3):109063.

PMID: 38420583 PMC: 10901092. DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2024.109063.


Temperature and microclimate refugia use influence migratory timings of a threatened grassland bird.

Ramos R, Franco A, Gilroy J, Silva J Mov Ecol. 2023; 11(1):75.

PMID: 38041190 PMC: 10691164. DOI: 10.1186/s40462-023-00437-7.


Hidden Markov movement models reveal diverse seasonal movement patterns in two North American ungulates.

Paterson J, Johnston A, Ortega A, Wallace C, Kauffman M Ecol Evol. 2023; 13(7):e10282.

PMID: 37484933 PMC: 10361361. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.10282.


Diverse migration patterns and seasonal habitat use of Stone's sheep ().

Enns G, Jex B, Boyce M PeerJ. 2023; 11:e15215.

PMID: 37342360 PMC: 10278595. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.15215.