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Emily Chen & Kat Eun OPTIMAL GROUP SIZE, DISPERSAL DECISIONS AND POSTDISPERSAL RELATIONSHIPS IN FEMALE AFRICAN LIONS (KIMBERLY L. VANDERWAAL, ANNA MOSSER, CRAIG PACKER, 2009)
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FINAL Lion Presentation

Apr 13, 2017

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Page 1: FINAL Lion Presentation

Emily Chen & Kat Eun

OPTIMAL GROUP SIZE, DISPERSAL DECISIONS AND POSTDISPERSAL RELATIONSHIPS IN

FEMALE AFRICAN LIONS(KIMBERLY L. VANDERWAAL,

ANNA MOSSER, CRAIG PACKER, 2009)

Page 2: FINAL Lion Presentation

BACKGROUND

• Little to no reproductive skew

• Equal breeding opportunities

But still…

• Patterns of dispersal within females

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WHY?

• Hypothesis: Dispersal decisions are sensitive to• Pride size• Interpride competition• Natal territory quality

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PREDICTIONS

• Dispersal will increase:

-Large pride size

-Low interpride competition

-Low territory quality

• Prides will remain close post-dispersal:

-High natal territory quality

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RESEARCH• Where: Serengeti National Park, Tanzania• 2000 km2

• Two habitat types:• Acacia Woodlands• Open-grassland Plains

• Who: 200-300 lions• Neighbor prides• Unrelated• Related• 2, 5, 10 years

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METHODS

• How: GPS radio collar

• When: Year of first male takeover

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RESULTS

• Probability of female dispersal increased with increasing pride size• Supports within-group competition prediction

• Reproductive success declined when:• Pride size exceeded 11 adult females (woodlands)• Pride size exceeded 6 adult females (plains)

• Prides almost never split unless further recruitment of subadult females increased pride size to a point where individual reproductive success was reduced

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Figure1 Two-year per capita reproductive success of females in woodlands (grey bars) and plains (white bars) prides. Pride size is the number of adult females in each pride.

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Dispersal• Probability of dispersal

decreased with increasing intergroup competition

• No evidence that territory quality influenced dispersal decisions

• Subadult females more likely to disperse when intragroup competition=high, intergroup competition=low

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After dispersal – Territorial overlap

• First few years after dispersal:• Territorial overlap with mother’s pride

• As # of unrelated prides increased, daughter prides moved closer to their mothers’ pride

• High territory quality closer proximity between all neighboring prides BUT only increased overlap between related prides

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DISCUSSION

• Clear habitat-specific threshold for dispersal

• When potential pride size exceeded this threshold: ~50% of female cohorts dispersed

• When potential pride size was below threshold: only ~9% dispersed

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Existing prides reaction to their daughters’ prides

Figure3 Proximity between maternal and descendant prides after dispersal (see Table 2 for statistics).

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Territory Quality - Effect on Territorial Overlap

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Territory quality

• Overlap between related neighbors increased with increasing territory quality, even though distance between territory centers did not change

• Habitat quality increased tolerance of related neighbors

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CONCLUSIONS

Dispersal will increase:

-Large pride size YES!-Low intergroup competition YES!-Low territory quality YES!

Prides will remain close post-dispersal:

-High natal territory quality YES