在线查找
与期刊/刊物的链接
在图书馆查找
正在查找有这资料的图书馆...
详细书目
| 文件类型: | 文章 |
|---|---|
| 所有的著者/提供者: | C Patrick Doncaster; David W Macdonald |
| ISSN: | 0021-8790 |
| OCLC号码: | 484021810 |
| 语言注释: | English |
| 注意: | Fig. 2. Plots of range configuration and overlap for the total home ranges of (a) ten city foxes (m = male, f = female) including a single representative from each group range; (b) twelve suburban foxes tracked over comparable periods. Shared areas of neighbouring home ranges are indicated by shading ([unrepresentable symbol] = 2, [unrepresentable symbol] = 3, ■ = 4 foxes). While no exclusive territories could be identified in the city, the juxtaposition of three group ranges (arrowed) are shown for the suburbs, bordered, to the east, by the territories of two radio-collared vixens. Each of these group ranges contained only one adult male together with up to five adult females. The two circles represent average total ranges of 93·4 ha in the city and 54·3 ha in the suburbs. Fig. 6. Synchronous displacement of two group ranges. Range borders are identified for periods when group members were tracked; overlapping areas are shaded. • = Garden feeding site, ○ = abandoned field of scrub. |
| 奖励: |
摘要:
(1) The spatial organization of a population of red foxes, Vulpes vulpes L., living in the city of Oxford was investigated and contrasted to that of a neighbouring population in the surrounding suburbs. (2) Both populations were organized in social groups, each of which occupied an exclusive territory. While territories in the suburbs were spatially stable, those in the city drifted in location continually, but they did so in such a way that the juxtaposition of neighbouring groups remained essentially unaltered across generations of occupants. (3) The hexagonal pattern of city ranges moved at a rate equivalent to the complete displacement of an average (38.8 ha) every 13 months (3.01 ha month-1), although drifting was more pronounced from November to April. City and suburban foxes had comparable diets and ranges of the same order of magnitude; the mobility of city foxes was associated with social instability due to a higher turnover of the population and a lower proportion of barren vixens. (4) As a response to constraints of the city environment not encountered in the suburbs, synchronous drifting of city ranges represents a rapid modification of behaviour since the urban niche first became occupied by foxes in the 1930s.
