Creeping in the night: What might ecologists be missing?

Wildlife activity patterns tend to be defined by terms such as diurnal and nocturnal that might not fully depict the complexity of a species' life history strategy and behavior in a given system. These activity pattern categories often influence the methodological approaches employed, including...

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Main Authors: Carol Anne Nichols, Kathleen Alexander
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://storage.googleapis.com/plos-corpus-prod/10.1371/journal.pone.0198277/1/pone.0198277.pdf?X-Goog-Algorithm=GOOG4-RSA-SHA256&X-Goog-Credential=wombat-sa%40plos-prod.iam.gserviceaccount.com%2F20210218%2Fauto%2Fstorage%2Fgoog4_request&X-Goog-Date=20210218T134426Z&X-Goog-Expires=3600&X-Goog-SignedHeaders=host&X-Goog-Signature=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author Carol Anne Nichols
Kathleen Alexander
author_facet Carol Anne Nichols
Kathleen Alexander
author_sort Carol Anne Nichols
collection DOAJ
description Wildlife activity patterns tend to be defined by terms such as diurnal and nocturnal that might not fully depict the complexity of a species' life history strategy and behavior in a given system. These activity pattern categories often influence the methodological approaches employed, including the temporal period of study (daylight or nighttime). We evaluated banded mongoose (Mungos mungo) behavior in Northern Botswana through the use of remote sensing cameras at active den sites in order to characterize early morning behavior for this diurnal species. Our approach, however, provided the facility to capture unexpected nocturnal activity in a species that had otherwise only been studied during daylight hours. Camera traps were deployed for 215 trap days (24 hour data capture period) at den sites, capturing 5,472 photos over all events. Nocturnal activity was identified in 3% of trap days at study den sites with both vigilant and non-vigilant nocturnal behaviors identified. While vigilant behaviors involved troop fleeing responses, observations of non-vigilant behaviors suggest nonresident mongoose may investigate den sites of other troops during nocturnal time periods. There was no association between the occurrence of nocturnal activity and lunar phase (Fisher's exact test, n = 215, p = 0.638) and thus, increased moonlight was not identified as a factor influencing nocturnal behavior. The drivers and fitness consequences of these nocturnal activities remain uncertain and present intriguing areas for future research. Our findings highlight the need for ecological studies to more explicitly address and evaluate the potential for temporal variability in activity periods. Modifying our approach and embracing variation in wildlife activity patterns might provide new insights into the interaction between ecological phenomenon and species biology that spans the diurnal-nocturnal spectrum.
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spelling doaj-art-00d8c1f4d97f44dba94bbaddb99462422025-08-20T02:45:23ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01136e019827710.1371/journal.pone.0198277Creeping in the night: What might ecologists be missing?Carol Anne NicholsKathleen AlexanderWildlife activity patterns tend to be defined by terms such as diurnal and nocturnal that might not fully depict the complexity of a species' life history strategy and behavior in a given system. These activity pattern categories often influence the methodological approaches employed, including the temporal period of study (daylight or nighttime). We evaluated banded mongoose (Mungos mungo) behavior in Northern Botswana through the use of remote sensing cameras at active den sites in order to characterize early morning behavior for this diurnal species. Our approach, however, provided the facility to capture unexpected nocturnal activity in a species that had otherwise only been studied during daylight hours. Camera traps were deployed for 215 trap days (24 hour data capture period) at den sites, capturing 5,472 photos over all events. Nocturnal activity was identified in 3% of trap days at study den sites with both vigilant and non-vigilant nocturnal behaviors identified. While vigilant behaviors involved troop fleeing responses, observations of non-vigilant behaviors suggest nonresident mongoose may investigate den sites of other troops during nocturnal time periods. There was no association between the occurrence of nocturnal activity and lunar phase (Fisher's exact test, n = 215, p = 0.638) and thus, increased moonlight was not identified as a factor influencing nocturnal behavior. The drivers and fitness consequences of these nocturnal activities remain uncertain and present intriguing areas for future research. Our findings highlight the need for ecological studies to more explicitly address and evaluate the potential for temporal variability in activity periods. Modifying our approach and embracing variation in wildlife activity patterns might provide new insights into the interaction between ecological phenomenon and species biology that spans the diurnal-nocturnal spectrum.https://storage.googleapis.com/plos-corpus-prod/10.1371/journal.pone.0198277/1/pone.0198277.pdf?X-Goog-Algorithm=GOOG4-RSA-SHA256&X-Goog-Credential=wombat-sa%40plos-prod.iam.gserviceaccount.com%2F20210218%2Fauto%2Fstorage%2Fgoog4_request&X-Goog-Date=20210218T134426Z&X-Goog-Expires=3600&X-Goog-SignedHeaders=host&X-Goog-Signature=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
spellingShingle Carol Anne Nichols
Kathleen Alexander
Creeping in the night: What might ecologists be missing?
PLoS ONE
title Creeping in the night: What might ecologists be missing?
title_full Creeping in the night: What might ecologists be missing?
title_fullStr Creeping in the night: What might ecologists be missing?
title_full_unstemmed Creeping in the night: What might ecologists be missing?
title_short Creeping in the night: What might ecologists be missing?
title_sort creeping in the night what might ecologists be missing
url https://storage.googleapis.com/plos-corpus-prod/10.1371/journal.pone.0198277/1/pone.0198277.pdf?X-Goog-Algorithm=GOOG4-RSA-SHA256&X-Goog-Credential=wombat-sa%40plos-prod.iam.gserviceaccount.com%2F20210218%2Fauto%2Fstorage%2Fgoog4_request&X-Goog-Date=20210218T134426Z&X-Goog-Expires=3600&X-Goog-SignedHeaders=host&X-Goog-Signature=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