Abstract

We monitored the ranging of a wild European badger (Meles meles) population over 7 years using GPS tracking collars. Badger range sizes varied seasonally and reached their maximum in June, July and August. We analysed the summer ranging behaviour, using 83 home range estimates from 48 individuals over 6974 collar-nights. We found that while most adult badgers (males and females) remained within their own traditional social group boundaries, several male badgers (on average 22%) regularly ranged beyond these traditional boundaries. These adult males frequently ranged throughout two (or more) social group’s traditional territories and had extremely large home ranges. We therefore refer to them as super-rangers. While ranging across traditional boundaries has been recorded over short periods of time for extraterritorial mating and foraging forays, or for pre-dispersal exploration, the animals in this study maintained their super-ranges from 2 to 36 months. This study represents the first time such long-term extra-territorial ranging has been described for European badgers. Holding a super-range may confer an advantage in access to breeding females, but could also affect local interaction networks. In Ireland & the UK, badgers act as a wildlife reservoir for bovine tuberculosis (TB). Super-ranging may facilitate the spread of disease by increasing both direct interactions between conspecifics, particularly across social groups, and indirect interactions with cattle in their shared environment. Understanding super-ranging behaviour may both improve our understanding of tuberculosis epidemiology and inform future control strategies.

Highlights

  • Knowledge of ranging behaviour is important where infectious diseases are problematic [1]

  • A new ranging strategy in European badgers studies in France [4,5]. In both the UK and Ireland badgers have been implicated in the spread of M. bovis to cattle and in acting as a wildlife reservoir for bovine tuberculosis [6,7,8]

  • All had been vaccinated with Bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG) when first captured

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Knowledge of ranging behaviour is important where infectious diseases are problematic [1]. A new ranging strategy in European badgers studies in France [4,5] In both the UK and Ireland badgers have been implicated in the spread of M. bovis to cattle and in acting as a wildlife reservoir for bovine tuberculosis [6,7,8]. Badgers are a protected species in both countries and culling is not considered a sustainable bTB control strategy [10]. Both the UK and Ireland are investigating parenteral and oral vaccine strategies designed to inoculate badgers against M. bovis [11,12,13]. The ranging of badgers is of direct importance to the transmission of TB infection both between individual badgers [14,15] and between badgers and cattle [16,17,18,19,20]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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