Abstract

We investigated key habitat features used by beech martens occupying a fragmented agricultural landscape. Locations of eight martens were radio‐monitored daily for 4–12 months each. We evaluated the selection of home ranges within a geographic area, as well as the selection of habitat features within home ranges, using random simulations for comparison. Home ranges included more wood and scrub vegetation, and less arable land, than random simulations. They also included a higher proportion of watercourses with continuous vegetation along their verges, and were closer to these watercourses than random simulations. Within home ranges, beech martens used wood and scrub vegetation, and farm buildings, more intensively than expected, and arable land less than expected. On average, beech martens stayed close to watercourses (where most of the wood vegetation occurred) but not to farm buildings, indicating that only the former shaped beech marten movements. By these findings, arable land appeared to act as a seldom traversed barrier, making farm buildings uneasy to reach if they are located far from watercourses.

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