Back

The centrality of ecotones: How scale, sex, and ontogeny shape the spatial ecology of a solitary carnivore

Glover-Kapfer, P.; Song, Q.; Erb, J.

2026-05-05 ecology
10.64898/2026.05.01.722308 bioRxiv
Show abstract

ContextAnimals balance resource acquisition with risk mitigation. These trade-offs are rarely uniform, being mediated by spatial scale, demographic traits, and environmental constraints. Understanding these divergent spatial behaviors is critical for management across human-dominated landscapes. ObjectivesWe investigated how sexual dimorphism and ontogeny interact with landscape structure to influence scale-dependent resource selection. Specifically, we sought to determine how these demographic factors mediate spatial trade-offs between optimal foraging habitats, top-down intraguild predation risk, and bottom-up severe winter weather. MethodsWe examined the spatial ecology of a solitary carnivore, the bobcat (Lynx rufus), across a heterogeneous, human-modified landscape in northern Minnesota, USA. Using spatial data derived from harvested adult and juvenile individuals, we evaluated multi-scale selection relative to land cover, structural ecotones, intraguild predator activity, and winter severity. ResultsHabitat selection was scale-dependent and partitioned demographically. Whereas bobcats universally selected for ecotones and avoided homogeneous open habitats at fine scales, responses to other features diverged by sex and age. Females actively avoided areas with high coyote activity and freezing temperatures; males exhibited high risk tolerance, apparently indifferent to coyote activity and tolerant of freezing temperatures. We identified a distinct ontogenetic spatial shift among females. Subordinate juveniles were competitively excluded from optimal natural ecotones, forcing them into riskier, anthropogenic agricultural edges. In contrast, adult females optimized foraging opportunities by selecting productive ecotones at the intersection of woody vegetation and semi-natural grasslands. ConclusionsOur findings demonstrate that habitat selection is not a static species-level trait, but instead a dynamic process resulting from the interaction between ontogeny, sex, and landscape heterogeneity. The reliance of vulnerable demographic groups on marginal or anthropogenic habitats highlights how human land-use changes can inadvertently produce ecological winners and losers within the same species. Consequently, landscape management and conservation planning for solitary carnivores must shift from broad, population-wide habitat prescriptions to strategies that explicitly accommodate the divergent spatial requirements of specific demographic cohorts.

Matching journals

The top 11 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.

1
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B
51 papers in training set
Top 0.4%
8.0%
2
Ecology
70 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
6.1%
3
Journal of Applied Ecology
35 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
6.0%
4
eLife
5422 papers in training set
Top 19%
4.6%
5
Ecology Letters
121 papers in training set
Top 0.3%
4.1%
6
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
2130 papers in training set
Top 19%
3.8%
7
Ecography
50 papers in training set
Top 0.3%
3.8%
8
Animal Conservation
11 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
3.8%
9
Ecological Applications
28 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
3.4%
10
Biological Conservation
43 papers in training set
Top 0.3%
3.4%
11
Ecosphere
53 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
3.4%
50% of probability mass above
12
Movement Ecology
18 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
3.4%
13
Ecology and Evolution
232 papers in training set
Top 1%
3.1%
14
Journal of Animal Ecology
63 papers in training set
Top 0.3%
2.9%
15
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
60 papers in training set
Top 1%
2.6%
16
PLOS ONE
4510 papers in training set
Top 45%
2.6%
17
Diversity and Distributions
26 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
2.6%
18
The American Naturalist
114 papers in training set
Top 0.9%
2.0%
19
Molecular Ecology
304 papers in training set
Top 2%
2.0%
20
Landscape Ecology
12 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
1.8%
21
Global Change Biology
69 papers in training set
Top 0.9%
1.7%
22
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
341 papers in training set
Top 4%
1.7%
23
Oecologia
23 papers in training set
Top 0.3%
1.6%
24
Functional Ecology
53 papers in training set
Top 0.6%
1.6%
25
Scientific Reports
3102 papers in training set
Top 65%
1.3%
26
Oikos
74 papers in training set
Top 0.5%
1.2%
27
Conservation Science and Practice
13 papers in training set
Top 0.4%
1.1%
28
Nature Communications
4913 papers in training set
Top 60%
0.9%
29
Biotropica
15 papers in training set
Top 0.4%
0.8%
30
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
53 papers in training set
Top 1%
0.8%