New publication: Roads constrain movement across behavioural processes in a partially migratory ungulate

By Gioele Passoni, Tim Coulson, Nathan Ranc, Andrea Corradini, A. J. Mark Hewison, Simone Ciuti, Benedikt Gehr, Marco Heurich, Falko Brieger, Robin Sandfort, Atle Mysterud, Niko Balkenhol and Francesca Cagnacci in Movement Ecology

Abstract

Background

Human disturbance alters animal movement globally and infrastructure, such as roads, can act as physical barriers that impact behaviour across multiple spatial scales. In ungulates, roads can particularly hamper key ecological processes such as dispersal and migration, which ensure functional connectivity among populations, and may be particularly important for population performance in highly human-dominated landscapes. The impact of roads on some aspects of ungulate behaviour has already been studied. However, potential differences in response to roads during migration, dispersal and home range movements have never been evaluated. Addressing these issues is particularly important to assess the resistance of European landscapes to the range of wildlife movement processes, and to evaluate how animals adjust to anthropogenic constraints.
Read the complete abstract at the publication webpage.

Publication details

Movement Ecology
Published: 13 November 2021
DOI: 10.1186/s40462-021-00292-4
Publication webpage.

Authors with CEES affiliation

Atle Mysterud.

Tags: Movement Ecology;
Published Jan. 1, 2022 10:48 AM - Last modified Mar. 21, 2023 10:54 AM