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      Spatiotemporal behavioral plasticity of wild boar (Sus scrofa) under contrasting conditions of human pressure: primeval forest and metropolitan area

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          Bioenergetics and the Determination of Home Range Size

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            Home-range analysis using radio-tracking data–a review of problems and techniques particularly as applied to the study of mammals

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              The scaling of animal space use.

              Space used by animals increases with increasing body size. Energy requirements alone can explain how population density decreases, but not the steep rate at which home range area increases. We present a general mechanistic model that predicts the frequency of interaction, spatial overlap, and loss of resources to neighbors. Extensive empirical evidence supports the model, demonstrating that spatial constraints on defense cause exclusivity of home range use to decrease with increasing body size. In large mammals, over 90% of available resources may be lost to neighbors. Our model offers a general framework to understand animal space use and sociality.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Mammalogy
                Journal of Mammalogy
                American Society of Mammalogists (ASM)
                0022-2372
                1545-1542
                February 2013
                February 2013
                : 94
                : 1
                : 109-119
                Article
                10.1644/12-MAMM-A-038.1
                8b790b51-7257-4575-8f29-15cf4721a182
                © 2013
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