Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5760353 | Journal of Theoretical Biology | 2017 | 48 Pages |
Abstract
Though musth behavior has long been observed and documented, the evolutionary advantages of musth remain poorly understood. Here we develop a game-theoretic model of male musth behavior which assumes musth duration as a parameter, and distributions of small, medium and large musth males are predicted in both time and space. The predicted results are similar to the musth timing behavior observed in the Amboseli National Park elephant population, and further results are generated with relevance to Samburu National Park. We discuss small male musth behavior, the effects of estrous female spatial heterogeneity on musth timing, conservation applications, and the assumptions underpinning the model.
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Authors
J. Max Wyse, Ian C.W. Hardy, Lisa Yon, Mike Mesterton-Gibbons,