Everything about Territory Animal totally explained
In
ethology,
sociobiology and
behavioral ecology, the term
territory refers to any sociographical area that an
animal of a particular
species consistently defends against conspecifics (and, occasionally, animals of other species). Animals that defend territories in this way are referred to as
territorial.
History
The idea of animal territories was first introduced by the British ornithologist
Eliot Howard in a book published in
1920. In the 1930s it was developed further by the American ornithologist
Margaret Morse Nice through research on the
song sparrow. It was widely popularised by
Robert Ardrey in his book
The Territorial Imperative, and the popularity of this book led to an exaggerated perception of the importance of territory in social ethology. In fact only a minority of species maintain territories with well defined boundaries, within which they live and find all the resources they need. Some territories are shared by the animals around the same area and therefore it increases competition
Classic territories
Animals like these defend territories that contain their nest site and sufficient food resources for themselves and their young. Defense rarely takes the form of overt fights: more usually there's a highly noticeable display, which may be visual (as in the red breast of the robin), auditory (as in much
bird song, or the calls of
gibbons) or olfactory, through the deposit of scent marks. Many territorial mammals use scent-marking to signal the boundaries of their territories; the marks may be deposited by
urination, by
defecation, or by rubbing parts of the bodies that bear specialised
scent glands against the substrate. For example,
dogs and other
canids scent-mark by urination and defecation, while cats scent-mark by rubbing their faces and flanks against objects. Many
prosimians use territorial marking; for example, the
Red-bellied Lemur creates territories for groups of two to ten individuals in the
rainforests of eastern
Madagascar by scent marking: the male
Diademed Sifaka also scent marks defended territories in some of these same rainforests.
Invertebrates which show territorality include some ants and bees, and the
owl limpet
Defense
Territories may be held by an individual, a mated pair, or a group.
Territoriality isn't a fixed property of a species: for example, robins defend territories as pairs during the breeding season and as individuals during the winter, while some nectarivores defend territories only during the mornings (when plants are richest in nectar). In species that don't form pair bonds, male and female territories are often independent, in the sense that males defend territories only against other males, and females only against other females; in this case, if the species is
polygynous, one male territory will probably contain several female territories, while in some
polyandrous species such as the
Northern Jacana, this situation is reversed.
Quite often territories that only yield a single resource are defended. For example,
European Blackbirds may defend feeding territories that are distant from their nest sites, and in some species that form
leks, for example the
Uganda kob (a
grazing antelope), males defend the lek site (which is used only for mating).
Territoriality is only shown by a minority of species. More commonly, an individual or a group of animals will have an area that it habitually uses but doesn't necessarily defend; this is called its
home range. The home ranges of different groups often overlap, and in the overlap areas the groups will tend to avoid each other rather than seeking to expel each other. Within the home range there may be a
core area that no other individual group uses, but again this is as a result of avoidance rather than defense.
Behavioural ecologists have argued that food distribution determines whether a species will be territorial or not. Territoriality is only expected to emerge where there's a focused resource that provides enough for the individual or group, within a boundary that's small enough to be defended without the expenditure of too much effort.
Territoriality is least likely with insectivorous birds, where the food supply is plentiful but unpredictably distributed.
Swifts rarely defend an area larger than the nest.
Conversely, large solitary (or paired) carnivores, such as
bears and the bigger
raptors require an extensive protected area to guarantee their food supply. This territoriality will only break down when there's a glut of food, for example when
Grizzly Bears are attracted to migrating
salmon.
Further Information
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