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Description: Home range analysis is a standard and fundamental concept in ecology used to describe animal space use over their lifetimes. Numerous studies use a variety of metrics to quantify home range; however, many reptile studies treat spatial data inappropriately by failing to account for the inherently autocorrelated nature of positional movement data. Here we analyse a publicly available data-set, collected by the authors of this study, to explore home range sizes using a modern home range metric –Autocorrelated Kernel Density Estimators (AKDE). Our data includes the movements of 17 Elongated Tortoises (Indotestudo elongata; 12 females, 5 males) located on average once every three days for an average duration of 353.76 SE±33.10 days. We found 14 of 17 individuals appear to be occupying a stable home range (using variograms to determine range residency). We made use of AKDE’s bias-mitigating measures to counteract the low effective sample sizes stemming from low temporal resolution radio-tracking data. The average AKDE home range for all 14 individuals with range residency was 44.81 ±10.44 ha. Bayesian Regression Models suggest comparable size estimates between male and female home ranges, despite males being physically larger than females in both mass and carapace length. These home range estimates have the added utility of being more comparable with other studies, less susceptible to errors from a suboptimal tracking regime, and are well positioned for inclusion in future meta-analyses (code and data provided).

License: CC-By Attribution 4.0 International

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