Abstract
Dwelling in a specific habitat requires adaptation to the habitat physical and biological properties in order to maximize fitness. Adaptations that are manifested in the organization of behavior in time and space reflect how the environment is perceived and utilized. Testing species from different habitats in the same laboratory environment can uncover the differences in their behavior and their adaptations to specific habitats. The question posed in this study is that of how two rodent species, one occupying flatlands (Tristram’s jird; Meriones tristrami) and the other occupying structured rocky habitats (common spiny mouse; Acomys dimidiatus), differ in the way that they explore the same three-dimensional laboratory environment. Individuals of these two species were introduced into an arena with a five-level ziggurat in the center, and their behavior was followed for 60 min. We found that both species preserved the typical spatiotemporal rodents’ behavior of establishing a home-base—a location that is a terminal from which they set out to explore the environment. However, the jirds, which live in flatlands, mainly travelled on the arena floor and the lower levels of the ziggurat; while, in contrast, the spiny mice, which live in rocky habitats and are used to climbing, mostly remained and travelled on the ziggurat, with some of them hardly descending to the arena floor. We suggest that the distinction in spatial behavior between the two species reflects their different motor abilities, different depth perception, and different umvelt (perceived world), in accordance with their different natural habitats.
Highlights
Different species occupy different habitats that vary in their physical structure and biological properties, thereby providing different opportunities for living and foraging
We used a three-dimensional laboratory environment to test two rodent species: Tristram’s jirds (Meriones tristrami), which live in flatlands and prairies [7–9]; and common spiny mice (Acomys dimidiatus), which live in a rocky complex habitat [9,10]
We compared the spatial behavior of jirds, which dwell in flatlands, with that of spiny mice, which dwell in structured rocky habitats
Summary
Different species occupy different habitats that vary in their physical structure and biological properties, thereby providing different opportunities for living and foraging. Animals need to balance among various factors, such as the cost of foraging, predation risk, intake of energy from food, chances of finding a mate etc., in order to optimize foraging and increase their fitness [1,2]. Each habitat poses different challenges, requiring different motor abilities and sensory perceptions and conceptions of the specific environment. Such specialization is striking in the case of related species. Kittiwake gulls (Larus rissa tridactyla) that nest on cliffs differ in various ways from other related gull species that.
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