The dynamics and demography of socially structured carnivores

Sociality in carnivores is theoretically expected to produce quantitatively different dynamics compared to solitary species, exhibiting Allee effects, increasing extinction risk and limiting population growth. There is also evidence in social species that demographic stochasticity can impact the pop...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Massey, J
Other Authors: Coulson, T
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:49e1063c-cdc5-4865-a931-5da91f4556c5
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spelling ftuloxford:oai:ora.ox.ac.uk:uuid:49e1063c-cdc5-4865-a931-5da91f4556c5 2023-05-15T15:50:26+02:00 The dynamics and demography of socially structured carnivores Massey, J Coulson, T 2016-04-05 https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:49e1063c-cdc5-4865-a931-5da91f4556c5 unknown https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:49e1063c-cdc5-4865-a931-5da91f4556c5 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Thesis 2016 ftuloxford 2022-06-28T20:11:28Z Sociality in carnivores is theoretically expected to produce quantitatively different dynamics compared to solitary species, exhibiting Allee effects, increasing extinction risk and limiting population growth. There is also evidence in social species that demographic stochasticity can impact the population when densities are high. Empirical support for these processes is lacking and the effects of socio-spatial structure on population dynamics is now widely debated. The roles of social structure, reproductive suppression, communal predator vigilance, communal hunting and babysitting on population responses to perturbations away from carrying capacity have important implications for species management. Social systems also possess inherent spatial structure. Such structure is known to influence dynamics in solitary species. This thesis investigates the relative contributions of spatial and social structure on population dynamics in three contrasting carnivores, from three different families; badgers (Meles meles), lions (Panthera leo) and grey wolves (Canis lupus), that each demonstrate comparable and different life history strategies with one another. Simple and complex structured population models are used to demonstrate how intra-group processes interact within inter-group process and habitat features to produce population wide dynamics. The models are used to investigate whether general rules governing the dynamics of social species can be drawn across species. Thesis Canis lupus ORA - Oxford University Research Archive
institution Open Polar
collection ORA - Oxford University Research Archive
op_collection_id ftuloxford
language unknown
description Sociality in carnivores is theoretically expected to produce quantitatively different dynamics compared to solitary species, exhibiting Allee effects, increasing extinction risk and limiting population growth. There is also evidence in social species that demographic stochasticity can impact the population when densities are high. Empirical support for these processes is lacking and the effects of socio-spatial structure on population dynamics is now widely debated. The roles of social structure, reproductive suppression, communal predator vigilance, communal hunting and babysitting on population responses to perturbations away from carrying capacity have important implications for species management. Social systems also possess inherent spatial structure. Such structure is known to influence dynamics in solitary species. This thesis investigates the relative contributions of spatial and social structure on population dynamics in three contrasting carnivores, from three different families; badgers (Meles meles), lions (Panthera leo) and grey wolves (Canis lupus), that each demonstrate comparable and different life history strategies with one another. Simple and complex structured population models are used to demonstrate how intra-group processes interact within inter-group process and habitat features to produce population wide dynamics. The models are used to investigate whether general rules governing the dynamics of social species can be drawn across species.
author2 Coulson, T
format Thesis
author Massey, J
spellingShingle Massey, J
The dynamics and demography of socially structured carnivores
author_facet Massey, J
author_sort Massey, J
title The dynamics and demography of socially structured carnivores
title_short The dynamics and demography of socially structured carnivores
title_full The dynamics and demography of socially structured carnivores
title_fullStr The dynamics and demography of socially structured carnivores
title_full_unstemmed The dynamics and demography of socially structured carnivores
title_sort dynamics and demography of socially structured carnivores
publishDate 2016
url https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:49e1063c-cdc5-4865-a931-5da91f4556c5
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_relation https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:49e1063c-cdc5-4865-a931-5da91f4556c5
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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