Arid
DOI10.4098/j.at.0001-7051.043.2008
Is communal burrowing or burrow sharing a benefit of group living in the lesser cavy Microcavia australis?
Taraborelli, Paula
通讯作者Taraborelli, Paula
来源期刊ACTA THERIOLOGICA
ISSN0001-7051
出版年2009
卷号54期号:3页码:249-258
英文摘要

Burrow systems play an important role in the life of rodents in and environments. The objectives of this study were to examine the hypothesis that group living is beneficial to the semifossorial rodent, and determine whether Microcavia australis (Geoffroy and d’Orbigny, 1833) burrows communally and/or shares burrow systems. I related the structure of burrow systems to the number of cavies inhabiting them, in two habitats with different soil hardness and different plant cover (El Leoncito and Nacunan). El Leoncito has a harsh climate, with lower plant density and softer soil than Nacunan. A total of 18 burrow systems were characterized at Nacunan, and 12 at El Leoncito. Social groups at El Leoncito have a higher number of individuals than at Nacunan, but the structure of burrow systems in softer soil is narrower (small area size), with fewer holes, less slope and depth of galleries, and with no relationship between the number of holes and burrow area. Therefore, considering the development of the burrow system as an indicator of the cost of burrowing, I conclude that communal burrowing to reduce the energetic cost of burrowing per capita is not the primary cause of cavy sociality. M. australis were not active diggers, because digging behaviour was rarely recorded at either site. Burrow systems of cavies persisted over the years of study, occupied by the same cavies and new offspring, and digging new burrow systems and tunnels was a relatively rare event at both sites. Under the burrow-sharing hypothesis, sociality could prevail in M. australis that regularly dig to build and maintain a burrow system which they use for a long time.


英文关键词Microcavia australis burrow system structure communal burrowing burrow sharing rodents social group
类型Article
语种英语
国家Argentina
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000267994800007
WOS关键词GOPHER THOMOMYS-BOTTAE ; MONTE DESERT BIOME ; OCTODON-DEGUS ; EVOLUTION ; RODENTIA ; ARGENTINA ; BEHAVIOR ; ENERGETICS ; PREDATION ; REFUGE
WOS类目Zoology
WOS研究方向Zoology
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/159493
作者单位(1)Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, Grp Invest Biodiversidad, Inst Argentino Invest Zonas Aridas, RA-5500 Mendoza, Argentina
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GB/T 7714
Taraborelli, Paula. Is communal burrowing or burrow sharing a benefit of group living in the lesser cavy Microcavia australis?[J],2009,54(3):249-258.
APA Taraborelli, Paula.(2009).Is communal burrowing or burrow sharing a benefit of group living in the lesser cavy Microcavia australis?.ACTA THERIOLOGICA,54(3),249-258.
MLA Taraborelli, Paula."Is communal burrowing or burrow sharing a benefit of group living in the lesser cavy Microcavia australis?".ACTA THERIOLOGICA 54.3(2009):249-258.
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