Episodic Gregariousness Leads to Level‐Dependent Core Habitats: A Case Study in Eastern Copperheads (Agkistrodon contortrix)

ABSTRACT Characterizing the complex relationships between animals and their habitats is essential for effective wildlife conservation and management. Wildlife–habitat selection is influenced by multiple life‐history requirements, which act over varying spatial and temporal scales, and result in disp...

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Main Authors: Tyler C. Christensen, Robert Kwait, Michael Van Clef, Brooke Maslo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-01-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70788
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author Tyler C. Christensen
Robert Kwait
Michael Van Clef
Brooke Maslo
author_facet Tyler C. Christensen
Robert Kwait
Michael Van Clef
Brooke Maslo
author_sort Tyler C. Christensen
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Characterizing the complex relationships between animals and their habitats is essential for effective wildlife conservation and management. Wildlife–habitat selection is influenced by multiple life‐history requirements, which act over varying spatial and temporal scales, and result in dispersion patterns that can differ across ecological levels. For example, sites that attract intense communal use (e.g., hibernacula and communal basking sites) are often a subset of the habitats required by individuals for survival. Despite the conservation importance of both individually and communally significant habitats, snake habitat models rarely incorporate information about both individual and population‐level activity. We used 4 years of radiotelemetry data from eastern copperheads (Agkistrodon contortrix) to evaluate the presence of multilevel spatial habitat responses and whether they revealed conservation‐relevant information. We related individual and population space use intensity to underlying habitat covariates to determine whether predictors of copperhead spatial activity were level‐dependent, and whether individual core habitats differed by sex and reproductive state. Copperheads' episodic gregariousness resulted in spatial and environmental separation between individual and communal core habitats. Population‐level use was greatest in rocky, forested habitats associated with winter brumation and spring basking, whereas individual‐level use was greatest in open habitats with woody debris associated with foraging and reproductive behaviors. Male core habitats were open and thickly vegetated while those of females were moderately forested, with gravid female core habitats containing ample woody debris. Our findings demonstrate that multilevel spatial patterns carry conservation‐relevant information about snake habitat relationships. We suspect that behaviors leading to multilevel spatial patterns exist in many wildlife species whose individual spatial activities overlap around shared resources.
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spelling doaj-art-8493be3b60a049db9ba4e6fbe46354832025-01-29T05:08:41ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582025-01-01151n/an/a10.1002/ece3.70788Episodic Gregariousness Leads to Level‐Dependent Core Habitats: A Case Study in Eastern Copperheads (Agkistrodon contortrix)Tyler C. Christensen0Robert Kwait1Michael Van Clef2Brooke Maslo3Department of Ecology Evolution & Natural Resources Rutgers University New Brunswick New Jersey USADepartment of Ecology Evolution & Natural Resources Rutgers University New Brunswick New Jersey USAFriends of Hopewell Valley Open Space Pennington New Jersey USADepartment of Ecology Evolution & Natural Resources Rutgers University New Brunswick New Jersey USAABSTRACT Characterizing the complex relationships between animals and their habitats is essential for effective wildlife conservation and management. Wildlife–habitat selection is influenced by multiple life‐history requirements, which act over varying spatial and temporal scales, and result in dispersion patterns that can differ across ecological levels. For example, sites that attract intense communal use (e.g., hibernacula and communal basking sites) are often a subset of the habitats required by individuals for survival. Despite the conservation importance of both individually and communally significant habitats, snake habitat models rarely incorporate information about both individual and population‐level activity. We used 4 years of radiotelemetry data from eastern copperheads (Agkistrodon contortrix) to evaluate the presence of multilevel spatial habitat responses and whether they revealed conservation‐relevant information. We related individual and population space use intensity to underlying habitat covariates to determine whether predictors of copperhead spatial activity were level‐dependent, and whether individual core habitats differed by sex and reproductive state. Copperheads' episodic gregariousness resulted in spatial and environmental separation between individual and communal core habitats. Population‐level use was greatest in rocky, forested habitats associated with winter brumation and spring basking, whereas individual‐level use was greatest in open habitats with woody debris associated with foraging and reproductive behaviors. Male core habitats were open and thickly vegetated while those of females were moderately forested, with gravid female core habitats containing ample woody debris. Our findings demonstrate that multilevel spatial patterns carry conservation‐relevant information about snake habitat relationships. We suspect that behaviors leading to multilevel spatial patterns exist in many wildlife species whose individual spatial activities overlap around shared resources.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70788habitat selectionhabitat usekernel density estimationmultilevel selectionradio telemetryresource utilization functions
spellingShingle Tyler C. Christensen
Robert Kwait
Michael Van Clef
Brooke Maslo
Episodic Gregariousness Leads to Level‐Dependent Core Habitats: A Case Study in Eastern Copperheads (Agkistrodon contortrix)
Ecology and Evolution
habitat selection
habitat use
kernel density estimation
multilevel selection
radio telemetry
resource utilization functions
title Episodic Gregariousness Leads to Level‐Dependent Core Habitats: A Case Study in Eastern Copperheads (Agkistrodon contortrix)
title_full Episodic Gregariousness Leads to Level‐Dependent Core Habitats: A Case Study in Eastern Copperheads (Agkistrodon contortrix)
title_fullStr Episodic Gregariousness Leads to Level‐Dependent Core Habitats: A Case Study in Eastern Copperheads (Agkistrodon contortrix)
title_full_unstemmed Episodic Gregariousness Leads to Level‐Dependent Core Habitats: A Case Study in Eastern Copperheads (Agkistrodon contortrix)
title_short Episodic Gregariousness Leads to Level‐Dependent Core Habitats: A Case Study in Eastern Copperheads (Agkistrodon contortrix)
title_sort episodic gregariousness leads to level dependent core habitats a case study in eastern copperheads agkistrodon contortrix
topic habitat selection
habitat use
kernel density estimation
multilevel selection
radio telemetry
resource utilization functions
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70788
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AT robertkwait episodicgregariousnessleadstoleveldependentcorehabitatsacasestudyineasterncopperheadsagkistrodoncontortrix
AT michaelvanclef episodicgregariousnessleadstoleveldependentcorehabitatsacasestudyineasterncopperheadsagkistrodoncontortrix
AT brookemaslo episodicgregariousnessleadstoleveldependentcorehabitatsacasestudyineasterncopperheadsagkistrodoncontortrix