Cargando…

Construct social‐behavioral association network to study management impact on waterbirds community ecology using digital video recording cameras

Studying social‐behavior and species associations in ecological communities is challenging because it is difficult to observe the interactions in the field. Animal behavior is especially difficult to observe when selection of habitat and activities are linked to energy costs of long‐distance movemen...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rasool, Muhammad Awais, Zhang, Xiaobo, Hassan, Muhammad Azher, Hussain, Tanveer, Lu, Cai, Zeng, Qing, Peng, Boyong, Wen, Li, Lei, Guangchun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7920787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33717458
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7200
_version_ 1783658351468478464
author Rasool, Muhammad Awais
Zhang, Xiaobo
Hassan, Muhammad Azher
Hussain, Tanveer
Lu, Cai
Zeng, Qing
Peng, Boyong
Wen, Li
Lei, Guangchun
author_facet Rasool, Muhammad Awais
Zhang, Xiaobo
Hassan, Muhammad Azher
Hussain, Tanveer
Lu, Cai
Zeng, Qing
Peng, Boyong
Wen, Li
Lei, Guangchun
author_sort Rasool, Muhammad Awais
collection PubMed
description Studying social‐behavior and species associations in ecological communities is challenging because it is difficult to observe the interactions in the field. Animal behavior is especially difficult to observe when selection of habitat and activities are linked to energy costs of long‐distance movement. Migrating communities tend to be resource specific and prefer environments that offer more suitability for coexisting in a shared space and time. Given the recent advances in digital technologies, digital video recording systems are gaining popularity in wildlife research and management. We used digital video recording cameras to study social interactions and species–habitat linkages for wintering waterbirds communities in shared habitats. Examining over 8,640 hr of video footages, we built tetrapartite social‐behavioral association network of wintering waterbirds over habitat (n = 5) selection events in sites with distinct management regimes. We analyzed these networks to identify hub species and species role in activity persistence, and to explore the effects of hydrological regime on these network characteristics. Although the differences in network attributes were not significant at treatment level (p = .297) in terms of network composition and keystone species composition, our results indicated that network attributes were significantly different (p = .000, r (2) = .278) at habitat level. There were evidences suggesting that the habitat quality was better at the managed sites, where the formed networks had more species, more network nodes and edges, higher edge density, and stronger intra‐ and inter‐species interactions. In addition, we also calculated the species interaction preference scores (SIPS) and behavioral interaction preference scores (BIPS) of each network. The results showed that species synchronize activities in shared space for temporal niche partitioning in order to avoid or minimize any potential competition for shared space. Our social network analysis (SNA) approach is likely to provide a practical use for ecosystem management and biodiversity conservation.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7920787
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-79207872021-03-12 Construct social‐behavioral association network to study management impact on waterbirds community ecology using digital video recording cameras Rasool, Muhammad Awais Zhang, Xiaobo Hassan, Muhammad Azher Hussain, Tanveer Lu, Cai Zeng, Qing Peng, Boyong Wen, Li Lei, Guangchun Ecol Evol Original Research Studying social‐behavior and species associations in ecological communities is challenging because it is difficult to observe the interactions in the field. Animal behavior is especially difficult to observe when selection of habitat and activities are linked to energy costs of long‐distance movement. Migrating communities tend to be resource specific and prefer environments that offer more suitability for coexisting in a shared space and time. Given the recent advances in digital technologies, digital video recording systems are gaining popularity in wildlife research and management. We used digital video recording cameras to study social interactions and species–habitat linkages for wintering waterbirds communities in shared habitats. Examining over 8,640 hr of video footages, we built tetrapartite social‐behavioral association network of wintering waterbirds over habitat (n = 5) selection events in sites with distinct management regimes. We analyzed these networks to identify hub species and species role in activity persistence, and to explore the effects of hydrological regime on these network characteristics. Although the differences in network attributes were not significant at treatment level (p = .297) in terms of network composition and keystone species composition, our results indicated that network attributes were significantly different (p = .000, r (2) = .278) at habitat level. There were evidences suggesting that the habitat quality was better at the managed sites, where the formed networks had more species, more network nodes and edges, higher edge density, and stronger intra‐ and inter‐species interactions. In addition, we also calculated the species interaction preference scores (SIPS) and behavioral interaction preference scores (BIPS) of each network. The results showed that species synchronize activities in shared space for temporal niche partitioning in order to avoid or minimize any potential competition for shared space. Our social network analysis (SNA) approach is likely to provide a practical use for ecosystem management and biodiversity conservation. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC7920787/ /pubmed/33717458 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7200 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Rasool, Muhammad Awais
Zhang, Xiaobo
Hassan, Muhammad Azher
Hussain, Tanveer
Lu, Cai
Zeng, Qing
Peng, Boyong
Wen, Li
Lei, Guangchun
Construct social‐behavioral association network to study management impact on waterbirds community ecology using digital video recording cameras
title Construct social‐behavioral association network to study management impact on waterbirds community ecology using digital video recording cameras
title_full Construct social‐behavioral association network to study management impact on waterbirds community ecology using digital video recording cameras
title_fullStr Construct social‐behavioral association network to study management impact on waterbirds community ecology using digital video recording cameras
title_full_unstemmed Construct social‐behavioral association network to study management impact on waterbirds community ecology using digital video recording cameras
title_short Construct social‐behavioral association network to study management impact on waterbirds community ecology using digital video recording cameras
title_sort construct social‐behavioral association network to study management impact on waterbirds community ecology using digital video recording cameras
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7920787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33717458
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7200
work_keys_str_mv AT rasoolmuhammadawais constructsocialbehavioralassociationnetworktostudymanagementimpactonwaterbirdscommunityecologyusingdigitalvideorecordingcameras
AT zhangxiaobo constructsocialbehavioralassociationnetworktostudymanagementimpactonwaterbirdscommunityecologyusingdigitalvideorecordingcameras
AT hassanmuhammadazher constructsocialbehavioralassociationnetworktostudymanagementimpactonwaterbirdscommunityecologyusingdigitalvideorecordingcameras
AT hussaintanveer constructsocialbehavioralassociationnetworktostudymanagementimpactonwaterbirdscommunityecologyusingdigitalvideorecordingcameras
AT lucai constructsocialbehavioralassociationnetworktostudymanagementimpactonwaterbirdscommunityecologyusingdigitalvideorecordingcameras
AT zengqing constructsocialbehavioralassociationnetworktostudymanagementimpactonwaterbirdscommunityecologyusingdigitalvideorecordingcameras
AT pengboyong constructsocialbehavioralassociationnetworktostudymanagementimpactonwaterbirdscommunityecologyusingdigitalvideorecordingcameras
AT wenli constructsocialbehavioralassociationnetworktostudymanagementimpactonwaterbirdscommunityecologyusingdigitalvideorecordingcameras
AT leiguangchun constructsocialbehavioralassociationnetworktostudymanagementimpactonwaterbirdscommunityecologyusingdigitalvideorecordingcameras