A force competition of predator on urban ecosystem

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Authors

Kacharat Phormkhunathon

Abstract

Definitely the fact, is an undeniable impact of habitat change and fragmentation in the urban ecosystem take effect to species loss causes population decline into local extinction. The results that emerged from habitat selection in ecology in this case study may suggest possible opportunistic of population turnover are caused by behaviour adaptive in the life-history of predators. And provides functional responses proportion aim for response to available exploit habitat. Though data imperfectly create approach sufficient of N assumes initial of each predator for testing and experiment theory empirical [y = 2.4444, Pr (>F) = 0.002466]. Moreover, consequences interspecific competition were determine nonhierarchical pattern by supposing Golden Jackal (species B) is dominant species in the community, show when encounter 1) Leopard Cat (species A) have dNAj/dt = 1.821292 [Pr (>F) = 0.2261] and competitive coefficient = 0.96797 [Pr (>F) = 0.3961] and 2) Common Palm Civet (species A) have dNAj/dt = 4.777457 [Pr (>F) = 0.2261] and competitive coefficient = 0.93647 [Pr (>F) = 0.3961]. That demonstrates plausible Golden Jackal discriminated occasion predominant obviously from the functional responses the robust. However, these results expect the one essence for estimating the population growth rate, especially from individual metabolic rate causes behaviour adaptive in template phase of spatial-temporal dynamics and predict carrying capacity free-bias improving. Effort understanding to mechanism complex before into broadly practical aims enhance the wildlife management and conservation probabilities.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.32942/osf.io/fhu46

Subjects

Animal Sciences, Animal Studies, Biodiversity, Biology, Life Sciences, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Urban Studies and Planning

Keywords

animal behaviour, Competition, Habitat selection, Predator, Urban ecosystem

Dates

Published: 2021-10-25 21:35

Last Updated: 2021-10-28 01:33

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License

CC-BY Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International