Abstract

This study aims to assess plot size related changes in spacing and behavioural synchronization in a herd of 14 German Blackface ewes kept on three different pasture sizes: S (126m2), M (1100m2), and L (11,200m2). In direct field observations, behaviour and nearest neighbour distance were recorded individually. Additionally, interindividual and nearest neighbour distances were derived from aerial photographs of the herd taken on plot sizes S and M. Nearest neighbour distances <1m accounted for more than 60% of observations, and were more frequent on plot size L than on plot sizes S (Z=3.3; p<0.01) and M (Z=3.2; p<0.01). Average interindividual distances were significantly smaller on S (4.89±2.62m) than on M plots (5.99±3.06m; t=7.3; p<0.01). Synchronization tended to increase with plot size (K(S)=0.42; K(M)=0.52; K(L)=0.66), but was not accompanied by a concomitant increase in dispersion. Aerial photography proved a valuable tool in the analysis of spacing behaviour as intraindividual repeatability of the derived distances was highly significant (Kendall’s W between 0.32 and 0.58; p<0.01). The sheep kept small distances on all plot sizes, thus the high degree of behavioural synchronization might be mainly attributed to the motivation for close proximity to any conspecific.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call