Seasonal shifts in habitat use and diet by eland confined in a small fenced reserve |
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Authors: | Francesca Parrini Giacomo DAmmando Jason P Marshal |
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Institution: | Francesca Parrini,Giacomo D’Ammando,Jason P. Marshal |
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Abstract: | Large‐scale environmental changes create challenges for conservation of wildlife, particularly in fenced, insular protected areas where many wildlife populations persist. Moreover, large mammalian herbivores inhabiting spatially and temporally heterogeneous environments face the challenge of securing highly variable forage resources. Mixed feeders like the eland (Taurotragus oryx) can switch between browse and grass, but the cues that elicit that switch are not well understood. We investigated the seasonal diet shift of eland confined to a small fenced reserve and the role of greenness to elicit that shift. Eland changed from a diet in the wet season, consisting of grasses and browse found in woodland and grassland vegetation types, to a diet in the dry season dominated by the greenest browse species still available in woodland vegetation types, as greenness of dry season forage decreased. Our results suggest that eland switch from browsing to grazing in response to phenophase of the grass sward, which could explain the varying selection of grasses versus browse observed across the species range. |
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Keywords: | Kgaswane Mountain Reserve mixed feeder resource use South Africa
Taurotragus oryx
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