Prey Preferences and Body Mass Most Influence Movement Behavior and Home Range Area of Komodo Dragons
Lizards, as predators, can use different prey foraging strategies that are expected to influence daily movement behavior and home range use. Variation in lizard movement behavior can be achieved via frequency changes in movement step lengths and turning angles that can facilitate distinctive prey-searching and foraging strategies. Komodo Dragons (Varanus komodoensis) exhibit a distinct dietary transition at ∼18 kg, where lizards switch from consuming small-bodied and abundant prey species to highly dispersed adult ungulate prey. Our study examined competing models for the relative effects of ontogenetic dietary shift, body mass, sex, time of day, and arboreal habitat use on Komodo Dragon movement behavior (i.e., the proportional use of Lévy flight movement steps) and home range area (i.e., 50 and 95% utilization distributions). Model ranking indicated that two models incorporating the proportion of adult ungulates and body mass best explained the increased use of Lévy flight movement behavior of Komodo Dragons. Body mass also best explained the increase in the 50 and 95% utilization distribution Kernel home range areas. However, the slope of this relationship was less steep than that predicted by metabolic scaling theory and suggested that attributes specific to Komodo Dragons, or their environment, may attenuate their spatial requirements. This study demonstrates that because of distinct shifts in diet and other activities associated with large body size, Komodo Dragons alter movement behavior and increase their home range area to optimize environmental resource use.

This study evaluated the movement and home range properties of Komodo Dragons across ontogeny and included observations from small juveniles (A) through to the largest adult lizards (B). Movement paths were observed from 20 individual Komodo Dragons resident to the Loh Liang valley on Komodo Island in Komodo National Park (C). Here we examined the effect of dietary preferences (i.e., prey size) on different types of movement behavior that could be characterized as Brownian (D) or Lévy (E) dominant movement behavior. Map Imagery ©2017, CNES/Airbus, DigitalGlobe, Landsat/Copernicus.

Results from the two top ranked generalized additive mixed models (GAMM) indicated that (A) the proportion of adult ungulates in the diet and (B) body mass (kg) most influenced the use (i.e., probability) of Lévy flight movement behavior in Komodo Dragons. Figures depict the mean prediction and standard error of the mean from the GAMM.

Two-dimensional Kernel home range estimates with 50% (pink line) and 95% (red line) contour levels for three Komodo Dragons of different body sizes (A–C). The relationships between Komodo Dragon body size and observed and predicted variation in 50 and 95% Kernel home range estimates (D). Observed estimates indicate pointwise 95% confidence bands around fitted models for 50 and 95% Kernel areas, respectively.
Contributor Notes
Associate Editor: C. Bevier.