TY - JOUR
T1 - Eurasian badger habitat selection in Mediterranean environments
T2 - Does scale really matter?
AU - Rosalino, L. M.
AU - Santos, Maria J.
AU - Beier, P.
AU - Santos-Reis, Margarida
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful for the financial support given by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia and Fundo Social Europeu (III Quadro Comunitário de Apoio) (PRAXIS/PCNA/C/BIA/105/96; LMR: PRAXIS XXI/BD/15842/98, SFRH/BPD/14435/2003), Fundação Luso-Americana para o Desenvolvimento and Northern Arizona University. Special thanks are due to Bruno Pinto, Carla Baltazar, Catarina Rei, Filipa Loureiro, Hugo Matos, Iris Pereira, Joaquim Pedro Ferreira, Maria João Cruz, Nuno Pedroso, Silvia Carvalho and Teresa Sales-Luis for the help during fieldwork. We would like to thank also to Maria João Cruz, António Mira (Universidade de Évora, Portugal) Centro de Estudos da Avifauna Ibérica, Instituto da Conservação da Natureza and Centro Nacional de Informação Geográfica for allowing the use of their data in the analysis. We thank to all, as well as Kai Eder for the German translation of the Abstract and Title.
PY - 2008/5/1
Y1 - 2008/5/1
N2 - It is widely believed that spatial scale affects habitat selection, and should influence management options, especially for species with wide geographic distribution or large territories. Eurasian badger habitat selection has been well studied throughout most of its European distribution range, but never at multiple spatial scales. We used compositional analysis to assess habitat selection of Eurasian badgers in southern Portugal at four spatial scales (1, 4, 25, and 100 km2). We assessed habitat use from setts, latrines and footprints presence, and road kills. Oak woodlands with understorey were selected at all scales, being the most preferred habitat at 3 scales (1, 4, and 100 km2). Pastures were most selected at the scale of the 25 km2 cell, but their use was not significantly different from oak woodland with understorey. Shrubs and pastures were also secondly important at the majority of scales. Contrary to findings at northern latitudes, deciduous forests decreased in importance as cell size increased. In the highly humanized and fragmented landscape of southern Portugal, Eurasian badgers are selecting the matrix of oak woodlands interspersed with patches of pastures, shrubs and riparian vegetation. In these oak woodlands, scale does not have a marked effect. Management for badgers should provide, for at least, 30% of oak woodland cover at all scales. Our study illustrates the across-scale importance of maintaining the historically human altered, sustainable and unique landscape and land use system - the montado.
AB - It is widely believed that spatial scale affects habitat selection, and should influence management options, especially for species with wide geographic distribution or large territories. Eurasian badger habitat selection has been well studied throughout most of its European distribution range, but never at multiple spatial scales. We used compositional analysis to assess habitat selection of Eurasian badgers in southern Portugal at four spatial scales (1, 4, 25, and 100 km2). We assessed habitat use from setts, latrines and footprints presence, and road kills. Oak woodlands with understorey were selected at all scales, being the most preferred habitat at 3 scales (1, 4, and 100 km2). Pastures were most selected at the scale of the 25 km2 cell, but their use was not significantly different from oak woodland with understorey. Shrubs and pastures were also secondly important at the majority of scales. Contrary to findings at northern latitudes, deciduous forests decreased in importance as cell size increased. In the highly humanized and fragmented landscape of southern Portugal, Eurasian badgers are selecting the matrix of oak woodlands interspersed with patches of pastures, shrubs and riparian vegetation. In these oak woodlands, scale does not have a marked effect. Management for badgers should provide, for at least, 30% of oak woodland cover at all scales. Our study illustrates the across-scale importance of maintaining the historically human altered, sustainable and unique landscape and land use system - the montado.
KW - Landscape ecology
KW - Meles meles
KW - Montado
KW - Portugal
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U2 - 10.1016/j.mambio.2007.02.004
DO - 10.1016/j.mambio.2007.02.004
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:41649094547
SN - 1616-5047
VL - 73
SP - 189
EP - 198
JO - Mammalian Biology
JF - Mammalian Biology
IS - 3
ER -