14 research outputs found

    Badger territoriality maintained despite disturbance of major road construction

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    Publication history: Accepted - 19 August 2021; Published - 3 September 2021.Road ecology has traditionally focused on the impact of in-situ and functional roads on wildlife. However, road construction also poses a major, yet understudied, threat and the implications for key aspects of animal behaviour are unknown. Badgers (Meles meles) have been implicated in the transmission of tuberculosis to cattle. There are concerns that environmental disturbances, including major road construction, can disrupt badger territoriality, promoting the spread of the disease to cattle. To address these knowledge gaps the ranging behaviour of a medium-density Irish badger population was monitored using GPS-tracking collars before, during, and after a major road realignment project that bisected the study area. We estimated badgers’ home range sizes, nightly distances travelled, and the distance and frequency of extra-territorial excursions during each phase of the study and quantified any changes to these parameters. We show that road construction had a very limited effect on ranging behaviour. A small increase in nightly distance during road construction did not translate into an increase in home range size, nor an increase in the distance or frequency of extra-territorial excursions during road construction. In addition, suitable mitigation measures to prevent badger deaths appeared to ensure that normal patterns of ranging behaviour continued once the new road was in place. We recommend that continuous badger- proof fencing be placed along the entire length of new major roads, in combination with appropriately sited underpasses. Our analysis supports the view that road construction did not cause badgers to change their ranging behaviour in ways likely to increase the spread of tuberculosis.AG was supported by a PhD scholarship provided by the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Ireland. This project was conceived, carried out and funded by the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Ireland, and the National Parks and Wildlife Service, Ireland

    Chapter 20 - Peat Fires in Ireland

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    Peatlands are one of Ireland's most characteristic natural features, making up about 17% of the Irish landscape. Their formation began at the end of the last glaciation (about 11,700years ago) and was initially confined to shallow lakes and wet hollows. However, over time there was a transition from open water to fen and then acid ombrotrophic raised bogs. Blanket bog also spread over extensive areas of poorly drained land in the uplands and western seaboard. This spread may have taken place in areas as early as 7000years ago but was more widespread by 4000years ago when the climate may have become wetter. Ireland's peatlands have been exploited for fuel over the last 400years, reducing the original extent of the peatland by almost 47%

    Chapter 20 - Peat Fires in Ireland

    No full text
    Peatlands are one of Ireland's most characteristic natural features, making up about 17% of the Irish landscape. Their formation began at the end of the last glaciation (about 11,700years ago) and was initially confined to shallow lakes and wet hollows. However, over time there was a transition from open water to fen and then acid ombrotrophic raised bogs. Blanket bog also spread over extensive areas of poorly drained land in the uplands and western seaboard. This spread may have taken place in areas as early as 7000years ago but was more widespread by 4000years ago when the climate may have become wetter. Ireland's peatlands have been exploited for fuel over the last 400years, reducing the original extent of the peatland by almost 47%

    Super-ranging. A new ranging strategy in European badgers

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    <div><p>We monitored the ranging of a wild European badger (<i>Meles meles)</i> population over 7 years using GPS tracking collars. Badger range sizes varied seasonally and reached their maximum in June, July and August. We analysed the summer ranging behaviour, using 83 home range estimates from 48 individuals over 6974 collar-nights. We found that while most adult badgers (males and females) remained within their own traditional social group boundaries, several male badgers (on average 22%) regularly ranged beyond these traditional boundaries. These adult males frequently ranged throughout two (or more) social group’s traditional territories and had extremely large home ranges. We therefore refer to them as super-rangers. While ranging across traditional boundaries has been recorded over short periods of time for extraterritorial mating and foraging forays, or for pre-dispersal exploration, the animals in this study maintained their super-ranges from 2 to 36 months. This study represents the first time such long-term extra-territorial ranging has been described for European badgers. Holding a super-range may confer an advantage in access to breeding females, but could also affect local interaction networks. In Ireland & the UK, badgers act as a wildlife reservoir for bovine tuberculosis (TB). Super-ranging may facilitate the spread of disease by increasing both direct interactions between conspecifics, particularly across social groups, and indirect interactions with cattle in their shared environment. Understanding super-ranging behaviour may both improve our understanding of tuberculosis epidemiology and inform future control strategies.</p></div

    Traditional versus Super Home Ranges.

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    <p>Filled polygons represent traditional social group ranges, Hawthorn social group to the north and Bracken social group to the south. The dashed polygon represents the summer 2016 home range (95% MCP) of Boru, a male badger belonging to the Hawthorn social group, but who habitually ranged across the traditional boundary separating the two social groups. The dots represent Boru’s GPS locations and the arrow represents the direction of extended ranging. Thick grey lines represent the N11 and M11 roads.</p

    Boxplot of Home Range Size (km<sup>2</sup>).

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    <p>Here, female badgers are represented by white, TRs by light grey and SRs by dark grey boxes. Numbers in brackets indicate sample size.</p

    Population Density Estimates (badgers/km<sup>2</sup>) for all badgers (adults in brackets) using the MNA [56] method and the M(h) method [58] in CAPTURE to account for individual heterogeneity.

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    <p>Population Density Estimates (badgers/km<sup>2</sup>) for all badgers (adults in brackets) using the MNA [<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0191818#pone.0191818.ref056" target="_blank">56</a>] method and the M(h) method [<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0191818#pone.0191818.ref058" target="_blank">58</a>] in CAPTURE to account for individual heterogeneity.</p

    Traditional versus Super Home Ranges.

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    <p>The filled polygon represents the Quarry social group’s traditional range. The dashed polygon represents the summer 2013 home range (95% MCP) of Billy, a male from the Quarry social group who habitually ranged beyond the boundary of that social group. The dots represent Billy’s GPS locations and the arrow represents the direction of extended ranging. Thick grey lines represent the N11 and M11 roads.</p
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