Abstract

BackgroundHurricanes can have catastrophic effects on coastal ecosystems. To minimize negative impacts of storms, animals may seek shelter in place, move to a nearby refuge, or evacuate long-distances. Crocodilians can be important predators in estuarine habitats, but little is known about how they respond to extreme weather events. We investigated the movement behaviors of eight acoustically tracked American alligators (Alligator mississippiensis) before, during, and after Hurricane Irma in 2017 within the Shark River Estuary of Everglades National Park, USA. Using tracking data, we compared their movements and habitat use before and after the hurricane to similar timeframes in other years without major storms.ResultsWe observed considerable variation in movement tactics and responses to the hurricane. Of eight animals that we tracked, two showed no changes in movement or habitat use throughout the study. Two animals ceased upstream excursions that they were regularly making before the hurricane with one of these animals reducing the distance ranged across the river system. Another animal moved upstream from the lower river to the mid-estuary immediately after the hurricane despite having not done this in the 60 days prior. Two other animals moved from the marsh and mangrove forest habitats to river channels several days after the hurricane. One animal shifted to commuting downstream from its upstream habitat shortly before the storm and continued this behavior for the rest of the 2017 and 2018 wet seasons.ConclusionsWe found considerable variability in behavioral responses to the hurricane, ranging from no discernable changes in movements to one animal exhibiting a complete shift in movement tactics not observed by any animal in the long-term tracking of this population. Our research provides insight into alligator movement behavior and ecology in the context of a major hurricane disturbance.

Highlights

  • Hurricanes can have catastrophic effects on coastal ecosystems

  • We investigated the movement behaviors of acoustically tracked alligators before, during, and after Hurricane Irma, which passed over Shark River Estuary of Everglades National Park, United States of America (USA), in September 2017

  • Fulton’s condition factor was not correlated with total length (r = 0.233, t6 = 0.585, P = 0.580), and exhibiting a possible behavioral response to the hurricane did not vary with body condition either (P = 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Hurricanes can have catastrophic effects on coastal ecosystems. To minimize negative impacts of storms, animals may seek shelter in place, move to a nearby refuge, or evacuate long-distances. Tropical cyclones, including hurricanes, can cause rapid and devastating physical and ecological changes to coastal and estuarine ecosystems. These disturbances can damage physical structures, impact hydrological conditions, alter biogeochemical processes, and directly affect. Given that coastal areas are subject to hurricanes, tropical storms, and other extreme weather events, alligators certainly experience impacts of these major disturbances. Another study suspected that storm surge in southwestern Louisiana after Hurricane Rita in 2005 pushed alligators inland [22] These reports indicate that coastal alligators may be passively displaced by changing hydrology from major storms; no studies have revealed the direct movement responses of crocodilians to tropical cyclones [8, 13]

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