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Featured researches published by Graziella Iossa.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2008

BODY MASS, TERRITORY SIZE, AND LIFE-HISTORY TACTICS IN A SOCIALLY MONOGAMOUS CANID, THE RED FOX VULPES VULPES

Graziella Iossa; Carl D. Soulsbury; Philip J. Baker; Stephen Harris

Abstract Male-biased sexual size dimorphism is typical of polygynous mammals, where the degree of dimorphism in body mass is related to male intrasexual competition and the degree of polygyny. However, the importance of body mass in monogamous mammals is largely unknown. We investigated the effect of body mass on life-history parameters and territory size in the red fox (Vulpes vulpes), a socially monogamous canid with slight sexual dimorphism. Increased body size in males appeared to confer an advantage in territory acquisition and defense contests because heavier males held larger territories and exerted a greater boundary pressure on smaller neighbors. Heavier male foxes invested more effort in searching for extrapair matings by moving over a wider area and farther from their territories, leading to greater reproductive success. Males that sired cubs outside their own social group appeared to be heavier than males that only sired cubs within their social group or that were cuckolded, but our results should be treated with caution because sample sizes were small. Territory size, boundary pressure, and paternity success were not related to age of males. In comparison, body mass of females was not related to territory size, probability of breeding, litter size, or cub mass. Only age affected probability of breeding in females: younger females reproduced significantly less than did older females, although we did not measure individual nutritional status. Thus, body mass had a significant effect on life-history traits and territory size in a socially monogamous species comparable to that reported in polygynous males, even in the absence of large size dimorphism.


Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 2008

Fitness costs of dispersal in red foxes {Vulpes vulpes)

Carl D. Soulsbury; Philip J. Baker; Graziella Iossa; Stephen Harris

The costs of dispersal are an important factor promoting natal philopatry, thereby encouraging the formation of social groups. The red fox, Vulpes vulpes, exhibits a highly flexible social system and one that is thought to represent a possible stage in the evolution of more complex patterns of group-living. Although the potential benefits accruing to philopatric offspring have previously been studied in this species, the potential costs of dispersal have received less attention. We contrasted survival rates, nutritional status, injuries and reproductive output of dispersing and non-dispersing male and female foxes in an urban population to assess the relative costs of dispersal versus natal philopatry. Mortality rates were not significantly higher for dispersing foxes, either in the short- or long-term. There was no evidence of increased nutritional stress in dispersing individuals. Dispersing individuals did, however, exhibit greater levels of wounding, although this did not appear to affect survival. Dispersing females were more likely to miss a breeding opportunity early in their reproductive lifespan. In contrast, both dispersing and non-dispersing males were unlikely to breed in their first year. We conclude that the major fitness component in females affected by dispersing is age at first reproduction.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2011

Behavioral and spatial analysis of extraterritorial movements in red foxes (Vulpes vulpes)

Carl D. Soulsbury; Graziella Iossa; Philip J. Baker; Piran C. L. White; Stephen Harris

Abstract Movements away from the natal or home territory are important to many ecological processes, including gene flow, population regulation, and disease epidemiology, yet quantitative data on these behaviors are lacking. Red foxes exhibit 2 periods of extraterritorial movements: when an individual disperses and when males search neighboring territories for extrapair copulations during the breeding season. Using radiotracking data collected at 5-min interfix intervals, we compared movement parameters, including distance moved, speed of movement, and turning angles, of dispersal and reproductive movements to those made during normal territorial movements; the instantaneous separation distances of dispersing and extraterritorial movements to the movements of resident adults; and the frequency of locations of 95%, 60%, and 30% harmonic mean isopleths of adult fox home territories to randomly generated fox movements. Foxes making reproductive movements traveled farther than when undertaking other types of movement, and dispersal movements were straighter. Reproductive and dispersal movements were faster than territorial movements and also differed in intensity of search and thoroughness. Foxes making dispersal movements avoided direct contact with territorial adults and moved through peripheral areas of territories. The converse was true for reproductive movements. Although similar in some basic characteristics, dispersal and reproductive movements are fundamentally different both behaviorally and spatially and are likely to have different ultimate purposes and contrasting effects on spatial processes such as disease transmission.


Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science | 2009

The Welfare and Suitability of Primates Kept as Pets

Carl D. Soulsbury; Graziella Iossa; Sarah Kennell; Stephen Harris

Amid growing concern about keeping exotic species as companion animals, nonhuman primates have been highlighted as inappropriate for private ownership. However, there has been no comprehensive review of the suitability of primates as pets, using a framework such as Schuppli and Frasers (2000). Schuppli and Fraser incorporate welfare of the individual, of others, and of the environment. This article (a) examines the numbers, origins, ages, and ownership trends of primates kept as pets in the United Kingdom and (b) identifies a number of welfare, health, and environmental concerns. Overall, strong evidence supports the argument that primates are not suitable pets; it is unlikely that the welfare of pet primates can be adequately addressed in normal households. Finally, using unpublished data on complaints and inquiries received by the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the study assesses the degree of public concern about the welfare of primates kept as pets in England and Wales. The article identifies a wide range of concerns about keeping pet primates and concludes that this practice should end.


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2012

Temporal genetic variation of the red fox, Vulpes vulpes, across western Europe and the British Isles

Ceiridwen J. Edwards; Carl D. Soulsbury; Mark J. Statham; Simon Y. W. Ho; Dave Wall; Gaudenz Dolf; Graziella Iossa; Phillip J. Baker; Stephen Harris; Benjamin N. Sacks; Daniel G. Bradley

Quaternary climatic fluctuations have had profound effects on the phylogeographic structure of many species. Classically, species were thought to have become isolated in peninsular refugia, but there is limited evidence that large, non-polar species survived outside traditional refugial areas. We examined the phylogeographic structure of the red fox (Vulpes vulpes), a species that shows high ecological adaptability in the western Palaearctic region. We compared mitochondrial DNA sequences (cytochrome b and control region) from 399 modern and 31 ancient individuals from across Europe. Our objective was to test whether red foxes colonised the British Isles from mainland Europe in the late Pleistocene, or whether there is evidence that they persisted in the region through the Last Glacial Maximum. We found red foxes to show a high degree of phylogeographic structuring across Europe and, consistent with palaeontological and ancient DNA evidence, confirmed via phylogenetic indicators that red foxes were persistent in areas outside peninsular refugia during the last ice age. Bayesian analyses and tests of neutrality indicated population expansion. We conclude that there is evidence that red foxes from the British Isles derived from central European populations that became isolated after the closure of the landbridge with Europe.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2008

Environmental variation at the onset of independent foraging affects full-grown body mass in the red fox

Carl D. Soulsbury; Graziella Iossa; Philip J. Baker; S. E. Harris

The period following the withdrawal of parental care has been highlighted as a key developmental period for juveniles. One reason for this is that juveniles cannot forage as competently as adults, potentially placing them at greater risk from environmentally-induced changes in food availability. However, no study has examined this topic. Using a long-term dataset on red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), we examined (i) dietary changes that occurred in the one-month period following the attainment of nutritional independence, (ii) diet composition in relation to climatic variation, and (iii) the effect of climatic variation on subsequent full-grown mass. Diet at nutritional independence contained increased quantities of easy-to-catch food items (earthworms and insects) when compared with pre-independence. Interannual variation in the volume of rainfall at nutritional independence was positively correlated to the proportion of earthworms in cub diet. Pre-independence cub mass and rainfall immediately following nutritional independence explained a significant proportion of variance in full-grown mass, with environmental variation affecting full-grown mass of the entire cohorts. Thus, weather-mediated availability of easy-to-catch food items at a key developmental stage has lifelong implications for the development of juvenile foxes by affecting full-grown mass, which in turn appears to be an important component of individual reproductive potential.


Evolutionary Ecology | 2010

The impact of ovulation mode on sperm quantity and quality in mammals

Carl D. Soulsbury; Graziella Iossa

Ovulation generally takes two forms: spontaneous and induced. These two ovulatory modes are predicted to cause different levels of male–male competition due to differences in males’ ability to predict the timing of ovulation of females that use each mode. Ovulation mode has been shown to be correlated with differences in testis size, but it is not known whether ovulation type influences ejaculate traits, specifically sperm quantity (sperm concentration, ejaculate volume, total motile sperm per ejaculate) and/or sperm quality (% sperm motility, % normal sperm). Using a cross-species comparative analysis of 130 mammals, we found that sperm concentration and total motile sperm per ejaculate were significantly greater in spontaneous ovulators. In contrast, ejaculate volume, % sperm motility and % normal sperm were unrelated to ovulation type. These data show that ovulation alters sperm quantity by increasing sperm concentration but not ejaculate volume, and that sperm quality does not vary with ovulation mode.


Conservation Genetics | 2009

The influence of evolutionary distance between cross-species microsatellites and primer base-pair composition on allelic dropout rates

Carl D. Soulsbury; Graziella Iossa; Keith J. Edwards

Allelic dropouts (ADO) are an important source of genotyping error and because of their negative impact on non-invasive sampling techniques, have become the focus of considerable attention. Previous studies have noted that ADO rates are greater with increasing allele size and in tetranucleotides. It has also been suggested, but not tested, that ADO rates may be higher in studies using cross-species microsatellites and that mutations may play a role in ADO rates. Here we examine the relationship between ADO rates and the relationship between evolutionary distance since divergence time between species for which the microsatellite was designed for and species on which it was used (divergence times), and how this may interact with median allele size. In addition, as the adenosine (A) and thymine (T) content of the primer may increase mutation rates, we also included total % AT content of the primer in the analyses. Finally, we examined whether other commonly associated causes of ADO (i.e. repeat motif length, median allele size and allele number) co-varied. We found that ADO rates were positively associated to divergence time and median allele size. Repeat motif length, median allele size and allele number positively covaried suggesting a link between mutability and these parameters. Results from previous studies that did not correct for co-variation among these parameters may have been confounded. AT content of the primer was positively associated with ADO rates. The best linear regression model contained divergence time, median allele size and total % AT content, explaining 21% of the variation in ADO rates. The available evidence suggests that mutations partly cause ADO and that studies using cross-species microsatellites may be at higher risk of ADO. Based on our results we highlight some important considerations in the selection of microsatellites for all conservation genetic studies.


Mammal Review | 2007

The impact of sarcoptic mange Sarcoptes scabiei on the British fox Vulpes vulpes population

Carl D. Soulsbury; Graziella Iossa; Philip J. Baker; Nik C. Cole; Stephan M. Funk; Stephen Harris


Conservation Genetics | 2007

Allelic dropout from a high-quality DNA source

Carl D. Soulsbury; Graziella Iossa; Keith J. Edwards; Philip J. Baker; Stephen Harris

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