Animal Behavior/Habitat

< Animal Behavior

Space Utilization

Individuals must find their place within the three dimensional expanse in which all material objects are located. Individual species ought to strive for finding the most favorable combination of spatial distribution and the use of resources offered there. Distribution and behavior of individuals or species contingent on spatially explicit references.Habitat refers to any part of the biosphere where a species can successfully live and reproduce; Niche, in contrast, describes a species' ecological role within a community.

Individuals

Fundamental vs. realized niche: A variety of factors may determine the presence or absence of a species at a particular site. Individuals of a species may not have reached the habitat - dispersal. Alternatively, a variety of determinants may play a role, including abiotic (e.g., weather conditions, soil, climate) or biotic (interactions with other organisms, predation, competition, disease, social factors).

Strategies, Decisions and Preferences in Behavioral Ecology: confer an adaptive advantage with success measured as <Fitness> Reproductive Success, the probability that an animal of a particular genotype and phenotype will manage to foster reproductively successful offspring.

Habitat Preferences

Natural selection will favor individuals which utilize those habitats in which the greatest number of successful offspring can be raised. Spatial constraints may involve a balance of considerations: e.g., Herring gulls; Variables to consider: resource limitations; spatial and temporal distribution of the resource; variation in resource quality; number of competitors that attempt to control a resource; Predation pressure, etc.

habitat imprinting: many migratory vertebrates, such as salmon tradition: mountain sheep, greylag goose migration

<Homerange>: area which an individual, pair, or group occupies or regularly returns to <Core Area>: area of heaviest use, may center on a resource, i.e. nest, water source, food source <Territory>: any defended area; area of more or less fixed boundaries from which rival conspecifics are excluded through Aggression (self-preservation, protection of the young, or resource competition)

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