When and where? Day-night alterations in wild boar space use captured by a generalized additive mixed model

Author:

Bollen Martijn123,Casaer Jim2,Neyens Thomas34,Beenaerts Natalie1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Environmental Sciences, Hasselt University, Hasselt, Flanders, Belgium

2. Research Institute for Nature and Forest (INBO), Brussels, Brussels, Belgium

3. Data Science Institute, Hasselt University, Hasselt, Flanders, Belgium

4. Leuven Biostatistics and statistical Bioinformatics Centre, University of Leuven, Leuven, Flanders, Belgium

Abstract

Wild boar (Sus scrofa), an abundant species across Europe, is often subjected to management in agro-ecosystems in order to control population size, or to scare them away from agricultural fields to safeguard crop yields. Wild boar management can benefit from a better understanding on changes in its space use across the diel cycle (i.e., diel space use) in relation to variable hunting pressures or other factors. Here, we estimate wild boar diel space use in an agro-ecosystem in central Belgium during four consecutive “growing seasons” (i.e., April–September). To achieve this, we fit generalized additive mixed models (GAMMs) to camera trap data of wild boar aggregated over 1-h periods. Our results reveal that wild boar are predominantly nocturnal in all of the hunting management zones in Meerdaal, with activity peaks around sunrise and sunset. Hunting events in our study area tend to take place around sunrise and sunset, while non-lethal human activities occur during sunlight hours. Our GAMM reveals that wild boar use different areas throughout the diel cycle. During the day, wild boar utilized areas in the centre of the forest, possibly to avoid human activities during daytime. During the night, they foraged near (or in) agricultural fields. A post hoc comparison of space use maps of wild boar in Meerdaal revealed that their diurnal and nocturnal space use were uncorrelated. We did not find sufficient evidence to prove that wild boar spatiotemporally avoid hunters. Finally, our work reveals the potential of GAMMs to model variation in space across 24-h periods from camera trap data, an application that will be useful to address a range of ecological questions. However, to test the robustness of this approach we advise that it should be compared against telemetry-based methods to derive diel space use.

Funder

Research Foundation-Flanders (FWO) as part of the Belgian contribution to LifeWatch

BOF mandate at Hasselt University

the FWO (G0A4121N) and from the Internal Funds KU Leuven

Publisher

PeerJ

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