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Strategies of homing behavior in the red squirrel,Tamiasciurus hudsonicus
Authors:Jacques Bovet
Institution:(1) Département de Biologie, Université Laval, G1K 7P4 Québec, Qué., Canada
Abstract:Summary Seventeen red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) were displaced and released about 600 or 2000 m from their home site, and the routes they followed during several hours after release were recorded. The analysis of these routes shows that, in their first attempts to leave the release site area, the squirrels' orientation is non-random with respect to the home direction (Fig. 2a). However, after a few hundred meters in this initial direction, the animals tend to go back to the release site area, and then to perform a series of radial forays centered on the latter.The results suggest that, in the conditions of the experiment, the squirrels have some information on the direction, but not on the distance to the home site. Their behavior appears to be governed by two complementary (but occasionally conflicting) strategies, one being to use the directional information available, the other not to proceed further than a distance which corresponds to the distance normally covered in spontaneous exploratory trips. It is argued that this double strategy is appropriate for spontaneous homing trips consecutive to an exploratory foray.
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