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4 June 2020 Scaling of movements with body mass in a small opossum: evidence for an optimal body size in mammals
Marcus V. Vieira, Diogo Loretto, Bernardo Papi
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Abstract

Movement by mammals generally increases with body size, described by a positive exponent scaling with either home range area or day range distances. Below ca. 100 g, however, interspecific comparisons suggest a negative scaling, increasing movement with decreasing body size. Such a pattern is expected from the rising costs of thermoregulation below ca. 100 g, implying that it should also be observed in intraspecific comparisons. We tested this hypothesis by investigating the scaling exponent of daily home range with body mass for a small (< 100 g) marsupial, the gray slender mouse opossum, Marmosops incanus. We tracked 85 opossums (56 M, 29 F) with a spool-and-line device between August 1998 and October 2005 in the Serra dos órgãos National Park, a region of Atlantic Forest in the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Individual paths were mapped and daily home ranges quantified by the minimum convex polygon encompassing each path. We formulated linear models and compared them using Akaike information criteria. The best-supported model for females had only climatic season as a main determinant of daily home range, whereas the best model for males had body mass and reproductive season as the main effects. As predicted, the scaling exponent of daily home range with body mass of males was negative, in contrast with positive intraspecific exponents for opossums > 100 g estimated in a previous study. The inversion in scaling relationships around 100 g in opossums supports the rising costs of thermoregulation as the main cause of this general pattern in mammals. Effects of body mass are generally weak in intraspecific comparisons, but might still be detected after standardizing other effects, opening new possibilities for testing macroecological models at smaller scales.

© 2019 American Society of Mammalogists, www.mammalogy.org
Marcus V. Vieira, Diogo Loretto, and Bernardo Papi "Scaling of movements with body mass in a small opossum: evidence for an optimal body size in mammals," Journal of Mammalogy 100(6), 1765-1773, (4 June 2020). https://doi.org/10.1093/jmammal/gyz166
Received: 19 February 2019; Accepted: 8 October 2019; Published: 4 June 2020
KEYWORDS
allometry
Atlantic forest
daily home range
Didelphidae
Macroecology
Marmosops incanus
marsupials
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