Ocelots in the moonlight: Influence of lunar phase on habitat selection and movement of two sympatric felids

PLoS One. 2023 Nov 30;18(11):e0286393. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0286393. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Various landscape and environmental factors influence animal movement and habitat selection. Lunar illumination affects nocturnal visual perception of many species and, consequently, may influence animal activity and habitat selection. However, the effects of varying moon stage may differ across taxa. Prey species often reduce activity during highly visible periods of night while predators may increase activity or alter their habitat use. Ocelots (Leopardus pardalis) and bobcats (Lynx rufus), two nocturnal predatory felids that coexist in southern Texas, may also alter their behavior in response to the phase of the moon. To evaluate the effects of lunar phase on habitat selection of ocelots and bobcats, we executed a step selection analysis using high-frequency GPS-telemetry data collected on each species (ocelot, N = 8; bobcat, N = 13) in southern Texas during 2017-2021 and compared step length during new versus full moons. We predicted that ocelots would increase use of dense thornshrub to reduce their visibility during a full moon. However, as bobcats are habitat generalists and are more active during crepuscular periods, we predicted less influence of moon phase on activity. Ocelots did not alter habitat selection in response to lunar phase but moved shorter distances during full moon phases. Conversely, bobcats selected for greater vegetation cover during full moons, possibly to facilitate hunting during brighter periods, but exhibited no difference in movement across lunar phase. We provide, to our knowledge, the first example of habitat selection by predators in relation to lunar phase and show differences across new versus full moons by ocelots and bobcats such that ocelots alter step length but not habitat selection while bobcats altered habitat selection but not step length in response to shifting lunar phase. Further, we suggest the high potential for ocelot-vehicle collisions on darker nights due to increased movement by ocelots and poor visibility for drivers.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Ecosystem
  • Felidae*
  • Lynx* / physiology
  • Moon
  • Movement

Grants and funding

Cooperative funding was provided by East Foundation, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Brown Foundation, the Tim and Karen Hixon Foundation and the Feline Research Program at the Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute. Funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, or decision to publish with the exception of the East Foundation which played a role in data collection, manuscript review and decision to publish.