Understanding the drivers of seasonal migration among large herbivores is crucial for management and conservation. The forage maturation hypothesis predicts migration even at low population density, due to the benefits of increased access to newly emergent, high quality forage. We provide the first study comparing migration tendency of the two most widely distributed deer species in Europe, roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) and red deer (Cervus elaphus). The study was conducted in an area with a low population density of both species. We found that 94% of the GPS-collared red deer, but only 27% of the roe deer, migrated. This supports the forage maturation hypothesis in red deer only. Our study thus provides evidence of multiple causation of m...
Migration is an important component of ungulate behavioural tactics, that is tightly linked both to ...
The forage-maturation hypothesis (FMH) states that herbivores migrate along a phenological gradient ...
The Forage Maturation Hypothesis (FMH) states that herbivores migrate along a phenological gradient ...
Understanding the drivers of seasonal migration among large herbivores is crucial for management and...
Partially migratory populations in which some individuals move to allopatric ranges during one seaso...
Animal populations exhibiting partial migration present a fraction of the population which is migrat...
Ungulate populations exhibiting partial migration present a unique opportunity to explore the causes...
The most common framework under which ungulate migration is studied predicts that it is driven by s...
We studied partial migrations in the European roe deer (Capreolus capreolus), a species particularly...
Ungulates show high plasticity in migration across and within species providing an ideal setting to...
Partial migration, when only part of the population migrates seasonally while the other part remains...
Migration is an important component of ungulate behavioural tactics, that is tightly linked both to ...
The forage-maturation hypothesis (FMH) states that herbivores migrate along a phenological gradient ...
The Forage Maturation Hypothesis (FMH) states that herbivores migrate along a phenological gradient ...
Understanding the drivers of seasonal migration among large herbivores is crucial for management and...
Partially migratory populations in which some individuals move to allopatric ranges during one seaso...
Animal populations exhibiting partial migration present a fraction of the population which is migrat...
Ungulate populations exhibiting partial migration present a unique opportunity to explore the causes...
The most common framework under which ungulate migration is studied predicts that it is driven by s...
We studied partial migrations in the European roe deer (Capreolus capreolus), a species particularly...
Ungulates show high plasticity in migration across and within species providing an ideal setting to...
Partial migration, when only part of the population migrates seasonally while the other part remains...
Migration is an important component of ungulate behavioural tactics, that is tightly linked both to ...
The forage-maturation hypothesis (FMH) states that herbivores migrate along a phenological gradient ...
The Forage Maturation Hypothesis (FMH) states that herbivores migrate along a phenological gradient ...