Publications by authors named "Maiko Hori"
Article Synopsis
- Dispersal in mammals can lead to increased feeding costs and predation risk, often showing a preference for environments similar to their birthplace, with male-biased dispersal observed in polygamous species.
- Japanese serows are generally solitary and monogamous, but their social behavior varies based on habitat type; solitary in mountain forests and more social in alpine grasslands due to better food availability.
- Research on Mt. Asama revealed that dispersal patterns of serows are determined by habitat characteristics rather than social dynamics, with limited gene flow and evidence of unidirectional dispersal from forest to grassland.
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