Abstract

In polygynous ungulates, males may achieve fertilization through the use of alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs), discrete phenotypic variations evolved to maximize fitness. ARTs are often associated with different male spatial strategies during the rut, from territoriality to female‐following. Although variation in space use patterns of rutting male ungulates is known to be largely affected by the spatial distribution of females, information on the year‐round habitat selection of alternative reproductive types is scant. Here, we investigate the seasonal variation in habitat choice of a large mammal with ARTs (territoriality and nonterritoriality), the Northern chamois Rupicapra rupicapra. Global Positioning System (GPS) data on 28 adult males were collected between February 2010 and December 2013 in the Gran Paradiso National Park (Italy) and used to fit resource selection functions to explore the ART‐specific use of key topographic features, such as elevation, aspect, and slope, and vegetation phenology expressed as NDVI values. Territorial and nonterritorial chamois profoundly differed in their habitat selection not only during the rutting season. Compared to nonterritorial males, territorial males used lower elevations in summer and autumn, preferred southern slopes in spring and summer, and used steeper areas in summer but not in winter. We found no difference in seasonal selection of NDVI values between males adopting ARTs. Our results suggest that territorial males tend to occupy warmer, lower‐food‐quality habitats in late spring and summer, whereas nonterritorial males are free to follow and exploit vegetation phenology and more favorable temperatures. Different patterns of habitat selection may reflect different trade‐offs between the optimization of energy balances throughout the year and the increase of mating opportunities during the rut in males adopting alternative reproductive tactics.

Highlights

  • Habitat use, the way animals use resources for foraging, resting, nesting, denning, or escaping (Krausman, 1999), reflects the need to optimize energy demand, nutrient balance, and individual reproductive success (MacArthur, 1972)

  • Global Positioning System (GPS) data on 28 adult males were collected between February 2010 and December 2013 in the Gran Paradiso National Park (Italy) and used to fit resource selection functions to explore the alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs)-­specific use of key topographic features, such as elevation, aspect, and slope, and vegetation phenology expressed as Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) values

  • Males adopting alternative reproductive tactics in chamois profoundly differed in their habitat selection during the rutting season, but throughout the year

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

The way animals use resources for foraging, resting, nesting, denning, or escaping (Krausman, 1999), reflects the need to optimize energy demand, nutrient balance, and individual reproductive success (MacArthur, 1972). This, in turn, may lead to different strategies of spatial behavior between sexes (Bonenfant et al, 2004) and potentially to sexual segregation, that is, differential space, habitat, or forage use by the two sexes outside the mating season (see Bowyer, 2004 for a review). Space use pattern in males, especially during the mating season, is largely affected by the spatial distribution of females during the rut (Ostfeld et al, 1985), which in turn influences male mating system and success (Emlen & Oring, 1977; Maher & Lott, 2000). At the end of the mating season, when foraging opportunities are constrained by snow cover, we expect no differences in habitat selection between male tactics

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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