Study of territorial behaviour and stress for the improvement of European wild rabbit restocking programs

View/ Open
Author
Ruiz Aizpurua, Leire
Director/es
Sánchez Tortosa, FranciscoPublisher
Universidad de Córdoba, Servicio de PublicacionesDate
2013Subject
RepoblaciónConejo (Oryctolagus cuniculus)
Conejo silvestre
Programas
Poblaciones
Córdoba (España)
Comportamiento social
METS:
Mostrar el registro METSPREMIS:
Mostrar el registro PREMISMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus L.) is a keystone species that is native to
the Iberian Peninsula and whose populations have undergone a dramatic decline in
abundance in their natural ranges throughout the second half of the 20th century. The
economic and ecological importance of the wild rabbit has now led to the need to
perform management actions aimed at boosting the remaining populations and
establishing new ones, particularly in Mediterranean areas. Restocking actions are one
of the handiest management tools, and scientific research whose objective is to define
and solve the major methodological problems is abundant in literature. However, the
majority of research has focused on factors which are extrinsic to wild rabbits, such as
predation, diseases and habitat, while neglecting other factors that are intrinsic to wild
rabbit biology. The principal aim of this PhD thesis is to improve the efficiency of wild
rabbit restocking programs by taking into account intrinsic aspects of rabbit biology
such as social behaviour and stress. In order to do so, I have performed five experiments
whose intention has been to test Fecal Near Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy and
indigestible faecal markers as cheap, easy, user-friendly and non-invasive tools by
which territorial marking by wild rabbits can be studied; I have also measured restocked
wild rabbit populations’ responsiveness to acute stressors in a non-invasive manner as a
predictor of population growth during the breeding season; I have additionally studied
the density-dependence phenomenon inside wild rabbit restocking plots, with the aim of
providing a better management of these plots and improving their efficiency as
extensive breeding sites; and finally, I have performed a supplementary experiment with
wild-type rats with the intention of attaining a better understanding of the relationship
between physiological stress and territorial behaviour. The first four chapters are framed...