Abstract

Warmer weather caused by climate change poses increasingly serious threats to the persistence of many species, but animals can modify behavior to mitigate at least some of the threats posed by warmer temperatures. Identifying and characterizing how animals modify behavior to avoid the negative consequences of acute heat will be crucial for understanding how animals will respond to warmer temperatures in the future. We studied the extent to which moose (Alces alces), a species known to be sensitive to heat, mitigates heat on hot summer days via multiple different behaviors: (1) reduced movement, (2) increased visitation to shade, (3) increased visitation to water, or (4) a combination of these behaviors. We used GPS telemetry and a step-selection function to analyze movement and habitat selection by moose in northeastern Minnesota, USA. Moose reduced movement, used areas of the landscape with more shade, and traveled nearer to mixed forests and bogs during periods of heat. Moose used shade far more than water to ameliorate heat, and the most pronounced changes in behavior occurred between 15 and 20 °C. Research characterizing the behaviors animals use to facilitate thermoregulation will aid conservation of heat-sensitive species in a warming world. The modeling framework presented in this study is a promising method for evaluating the influence of temperature on movement and habitat selection.

Highlights

  • Physiological performance peaks within a limited range of body temperatures in which molecular, cellular, and systemic processes operate optimally

  • Moose used shade far more than water to ameliorate heat, and the most pronounced changes in behavior occurred between 15 ̊C and 20 ̊C

  • The modeling framework presented in this study is a promising method for evaluating the influence of temperature on movement and habitat selection

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Summary

Introduction

Physiological performance peaks within a limited range of body temperatures in which molecular, cellular, and systemic processes operate optimally. Animals routinely operate in environmental conditions that trigger suboptimal body temperatures (Boyles et al 2011; Sunday et al 2014) This conundrum underlies two long-standing questions in biological research: (1) How do animals mitigate suboptimal thermal conditions, and (2) how effective are those efforts at mitigation? Animals can relax the constraints of limited ranges of thermal tolerance by modifying their behavior to reduce heat gain and dissipate heat at high temperatures. Such behavioral thermoregulation has a long history of study in biological research (Cowles and Bogert 1944), but this idea still offers fresh insight today. Animals can restrict movement to produce less metabolic heat (Stelzner 1988; Broders et al 2012), alter posture to reduce heat gain from insolation or increase surface area to shed heat

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