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1.
Summary We investigated the food preferences of captive snowshoc hares (Lepus americanus) in winter to test three hypotheses proposed to explain food choices by hares: (1) that food choice is related to the protein content of twigs; 92) that defensive chemicals present in twigs are negatively correlated with hare food preferences; and (3) that hares eat less-preferred but protein-rich twigs when their diet is buffered by large amounts of palatable food. Hares exhibited striking and consistent preferences for different species and, in general, preferred mature twigs to juvenile growth stages. Preferences across species among mature twigs were not, however, the same as preferences for juvenile growth stages across species. None of the three hypotheses adequately explained food choice by hares. Hares did not (1) select twigs that were high in protein content. They also did not (2) consistently select twigs that were low in resins or phenols. Finally (3), hares generally ate less, not more of non-preferred twigs in the presence of a protein and energy rich alternative food, commercial rabbit chow. Food preferences of hares must presumably have some chemical basis, but no simple theory has yet explained what this is. We suggest that hares may not be under severe dietary constraints imposed by chemical defenses in winter.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Plant carbon/nutrient balance has been implicated as an important factor in plant defensive chemistry and palatability to herbivores. We tested this hypothesis by fertilizing juvenile growth form Alaska paper birch and green alder with N, P and N-plus-P in a balanced 2x2 factorial experiment. Additionally, we shaded unfertilized plants of both species. Fertilization with N and N-plus-P increased growth of Alaska paper birch, reduced the concentration of papyriferic acid in internodes and increased the palatability of birch twigs to snowshoe hares. Shading decreased birch growth, decreased the concentration of papyriferic acid in internodes and increased twig palatability. These results indicate that the defensive chemistry and palatability of winter-dormant juvenile Alaska paper birch are sensitive to soil fertility and shade. Conversely the defensive chemistry and palatability of green alder twigs to snowshoe hares were not significantly affected by soil fertility or shade. The greater sensitivity of Alaska paper birch defensive chemistry and palatability to snowshoe hares in comparison to green alder is in agreement with the hypothesis that early successional woody plants that are adapted to high resource availability are more plastic in their chemical responses to the physical environment than are species from less favorable environments.  相似文献   

3.
Utilisation of heather at three Scottish moors, by red grouse, mountain hares, sheep and red deer, was measured by collecting their faecal droppings regularly from plots on heather patches of different ages. Rates of heather growth differed between moors, and preferences of the four species, all grazers of heather, were related more closely to its height than to its age. Thus hares spent most time on ground with heather less than 15 cm high, sheep less than 20 cm, grouse preferred heather 10–30 cm high and deer spent most time on heather over 25 cm high.
Differences between outer, middle and inner plots on patches at one of the moors in dicated that grouse are reluctant to move far from cover into areas of newly burned ground, and reluctant to move far into patches of tall, dense heather, when these are next to shorter material. Hares preferred the middle of patches on newly burned ground and very young heather.
At two of the moors, but not the third, there was evidence that heavy grazing by hares in winter reduced the amount of young heather available to hares and grouse in spring. This potential reduction in the quality of the spring diet of grouse is discussed In relation to previously reported associations between numbers of hares and grouse at those two moors.  相似文献   

4.
Across most of their range in Europe, mountain hares are usually restricted to upland areas with poor food quality. In these areas they generally feed on browse species such as heather or twigs and barks of trees. On lowland areas in Europe, with better food quality, the mountain hare is replaced by the brown hare ( Lepus europaeus ) which feeds predominantly on greasses. This khas led some authors to conclude that mountain hares are primarily adapted for browsing. In the absence of brown hares in Ireland, mountain hares are found on a wide variety of habitats including grassland. On grassland, their diet consists almost exclusively of grasses, up to 94% of their annual diet, which is more than has been reported for brown hares on similar habitat. Based on this evidence, and other work, it is proposed that the mountain hare in primarily a grazing animal and competitive exclusion by brown hares may underlie much of their present distribution in Europe.  相似文献   

5.
Mountain hares Lepus timidus L. typify species that occupy a broad geographic range and have flexible foraging and nutritional strategies. Such species may show a range of responses to habitat modification. This study aimed to provide a basis for prediction of the impact of mountain hares on woodland establishment, and of woodland establishment on mountain hare distribution. The selection of and the extent of incorporation of new woodland into the home range of mountain hares was investigated in an area where Scots pine Pinus sylvestris L. woodland was establishing within their usual habitat in Britain, upland heather moorland. Seasonal home, day and night-range sizes of radio-tracked mountain hares were determined using the multinuclear probability polygon technique and analysed using residual maximum likelihood (REML). Habitat selection was analysed using compositional analysis. Three main habitat types were available to hares: heather moorland with trees, heather moorland and grassland-mire. Mean home-range size of mountain hares in summer was 10.3 ha and in winter 9.6 ha. There were no significant seasonal or sex differences in home-range size. Females selected grassland-mire habitat in summer and showed no strong selection for any habitat in winter. Males selected heather moorland in both summer and winter. Heather moorland with trees was not selected preferentially by mountain hares of either sex in summer or winter. The absence of selection for areas of newly establishing-Scots pine woodland suggests that any browsing damage to trees by hares is most likely to be a function of the local abundance of mountain hares, rather than a result of active preference of hares for the modified habitat.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Overwintering mountain hares (Lepus timidus) fed selectively on the shoots of a number of northern willow (Salix spp.) species. The hares preferred certain species over others and mature shoots over juvenile ones. There was a negative correlation between the phenolic glycoside concentration in the twigs and the hares' feeding. This correlation was substantiated by feeding experiments in which oat grains treated with purified phenoglycoside and catechin fractions of willow bark were offered along with untreated control oat grains to free-ranging mountain hares. Both fractions in concentrations normally found in willow twigs inhibited hare feeding. The results suggest that these phenolic compounds play a crucial role in the building up of resistance patterns among the willows. The decline in resistance in mature shoots of tall willows indicates that the juvenile resistance can be, perhaps secondarily, an adaptation against mammals browsing from ground level. Accordingly, low willow species retain a high level of resistance also in maturity.  相似文献   

7.
Åke Pehrson 《Ecography》1983,6(4):395-403
Adult mountain hares in outdoor cages were studied in order to evaluate the consumption and the digestibility of natural winter foods. Food, feces and urine were analysed for nitrogen, phosphorus, calcium, potassium, magnesium and sodium, and food and feces for fiber as well. The metabolism of the different nutrients are presented in this paper.
When energy equilibrium was maintained hares assimilated as an average 21.6 g dry matter per kg body weight and day (29.5 g kg0-75). The fiber fraction showed a low digestibility ranging from 10 to 30% between different food species.
At energy equilibrium nitrogen equilibrium was usually also achieved; the hares then digested approximately 0.20–0.25. g nitrogen per kg body weight and day (0.27–0.34 kg -0.75). The apparent nitrogen digestibility was low, usually below 40%.
The demand for calcium, potassium and magnesium seemed to be well covered via the food. Phosphorus on the other hand was absorbed in small amounts only, which may sometimes have been insufficient. A negative sodium balance occurred when the hares were fed heather or the finest twigs of birch. Due to the low concentrations in the food this could create problems in the supply of sodium.  相似文献   

8.
In this paper we study the effects that woody plant chemical defenses may have on interactions between boreal hares that in winter feed almost entirely on twigs. We focus particularly on the fact that toxin concentration often varies with the age of twig segments. The model incorporates the fact that the woody internodes of the youngest segments of the twigs of the deciduous angiosperm species that these hares prefer to eat are more defended by toxins than the woody internodes of the older segments that subtend and support the younger segments. Thus, the per capita daily intake of the biomass of the older segments of twigs by hares is much higher than their intake of the biomass of the younger segments of twigs. This age-dependent toxicity of twig segments is modeled using age-structured model equations which are reduced to a system of delay differential equations involving multiple delays in the woody plant-hare dynamics. A novel aspect of the modeling was that it had to account for mortality of non-consumed younger twig segment biomass when older twig biomass was bitten off and consumed. Basic mathematical properties of the model are established together with upper and lower bounds on the solutions. Necessary and sufficient conditions are found for the linear stability of the equilibrium in which the hare is extinct, and sufficient conditions are found for the global stability of this equilibrium. Numerical simulations confirmed the analytical results and demonstrated the existence of limit cycles over ranges of parameters reasonable for hares browsing on woody vegetation in boreal ecosystems. This showed that age dependence in plant chemical defenses has the capacity to cause hare-plant population cycles, a new result.  相似文献   

9.
Here we describe the modification and use of a new tool type in the woodpecker finch (Cactospiza pallida). This species is known to habitually use twigs or cactus spines to extract arthropods out of tree holes. We observed an adult and a juvenile bird using several barbed twigs from introduced blackberry bushes (Rubus niveus) which the adult bird had first modified by removing leaves and side twigs. The barbs of blackberry tools provide a novel functional feature not present in tools made from native plants and de-leafing of twigs never has been observed before. Both birds were observed using several of these tools to extract prey from under the bark of the native scalesia tree (Scalesia penduculta). They oriented the twigs such that the barbs pointed towards themselves; this rendered the barbs functional as they could be used to drag prey out of a crevice. The juvenile bird first watched the adult using the tool and then used the tool that the adult bird had left under the bark at the same location and in the same way as the adult. Our observation highlights the fact that opportunities for the transmission of social information do occur in the wild and indicates that woodpecker finches are flexible in their choice of tool material and tool modification.  相似文献   

10.
Management of heather for game and livestock   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
MOSS, R., 1989. Management of heather for game and livestock. Heather provides food and cover for moorland herbivores. Interactions between soils, drainage, climate, muirburn and grazing affect the species composition, structure and growth of moorland swards. Together, these aspects of a sward determine which and how many herbivores it can support. Grazing and burning maintain much heather ground which would otherwise revert to scrub or woodland. Heavy grazing by ungulates can turn a heathery sward into a graminaceous one, so reducing numbers of grouse and mountain hares. On good soils, invading graminoids are usually nutritious grasses and the carrying capacity for ungulates can increase. On poor soils, grazing and frequent burning may lead to swards dominated by poor quality grasses and sedges so that the carrying capacity for ungulates declines. One way of reinstating heather dominance is to remove livestock; where there are no heather plants left, other techniques may be necessary.  相似文献   

11.
Summary

Heavy utilisation by mountain hares checked the growth of Calluna so that mean height was only 12 cm thirty years after the 0.2 ha area was burnt. Cover and biomass increased gradually over the thirteen years studied, from 59 to 85% and 300 to 580 g/m2 respectively. Differences in sward height were maintained, the greater utilisation of short heather being offset by greater growth. Compared to ruminant-grazed Calluneta, the hare-grazed sward had a distinctive, compact form, and biomass was great relative to cover and height because of the many shoots. Non-ericoid angiosperms had little cover.  相似文献   

12.
Shelter characteristics of mountain hare resting sites   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Mountain hares in Scotland live on open tree-less moorland in a harsh winter environment with frequent high winds and drifting snow. By day they rest in forms in tall heather, seats in shorter heather or snow, or scrapes in snow or peat. All these reduce wind speeds by 84-90%, but vary in the degree of shelter and concealment. Forms afford the best concealment and shelter and occur as often on flat ground as elsewhere. Seats and scrapes are commoner on sheltered slopes. They command a wide field of view but offer little concealment. During snow-lie, when forms may be covered, hares move to seats and scrapes, often at the edge of snowfields and gather, sometimes in large groups, on sheltered slopes.  相似文献   

13.
Over the last century in the uplands of Scotland, the extent of heather moorland which supports high densities of mountain hares Lepus timidus has diminished and has gradually been replaced by large-scale commercial forestry plantations or expanding natural woodlands. The potential impact of such a change in land use on host-parasite interactions was investigated by comparing the intensity and prevalence of infection of hares by parasites in two separate habitats: a large hare-fenced young forestry plantation and the adjacent open moorland. Carcasses were collected in November 1990 from within both habitats and after the woodland had been enclosed for nine months. Age, sex, fatness (kidney fat index) and degree of infection of hares were noted. Two parasites were recorded: the nematode Trichostrongylus retortaeformis and the cestode Mosgovoyia pectinata. Clear differences in the intensity of infection of adults occupying the different habitats had occurred in the nine months since woodland enclosure. Adult mountain hares in the woodland had levels of infections approaching four times that observed in hares occupying the open moorland and although not significant, the prevalence of infection was greater in hosts inhabiting the woodland than the open moorland. It is suggested that the parasite-host relationship differs between the two habitats and as heather-dominated moorland landscapes become more fragmented with the increasing establishment of woodlands, the impact of parasites on the life history strategies of mountain hares needs to be reconsidered.  相似文献   

14.
The theory of plant defences proposes that investments in physical and chemical defences are driven by the risk of herbivore damage, and limited by the cost of producing the particular defensive trait in terms of resources that could be directed to other sinks, such as growth and reproduction. We sampled twigs of 18 mature Acacia tortilis trees and their cohort of juveniles to test some predictions of this hypothesis. We expected a higher allocation of defensive traits to leaves and twigs in the young plants than in the mature ones as a result of a higher risk of damage by ungulates at the juvenile stage. Our results show that the juvenile plants produce more spines along their twigs, but have lower concentrations of phenolic compounds in their leaves than in the mature ones. We also expected a negative relation between the concentration of foliar nutrients and phenolic compounds, as predicted by the carbon/nutrient hypothesis. Only mature plants showed this pattern. Reproduction (in mature plants) and water stress (in juvenile plants) did not relate to allocation to secondary compounds as predicted by current hypotheses of plant defence.  相似文献   

15.
Raymond  Hewson 《Journal of Zoology》1990,220(2):287-309
Mountain hares in north-east Scotland spent the day in forms in long heather and moved downhill in the evening to feed in hill pastures. Here they grazed intensively, often in groups of 4–6 individuals. In June and July adult females, then pregnant or lactating, grazed in daylight on the pastures. Leverets spent less time grazing, and more in play and exploration. They spent the day in cover near the feeding areas, and if disturbed during grazing crouched or went into cover, while adults fled. During 1982 and 1983 males predominated in groups of grazing hares, but in 1984 both sexes were equally represented. These changes in sex ratio were reflected in the increased proportion of females trapped for marking between February and late July during 1982–86. There was a dominance order related to weight among male hares and dominant hares approached more females. There was no firm evidence of mate-guarding. Males approached females regardless of their oestrous state and were usually rebuffed with varying degrees of intensity including striking and chasing. There were no interactions between females. Adults of both sexes chased leverets for short distances but leverets joined groups of feeding adults. Neither leverets nor first-winter hares showed evidence of dispersal. Mountain hares avoided sheep and cattle and there were fewer hares after the arrival of sheep in May.  相似文献   

16.
We evaluated palatability of winter dormant tree twigs to the mountain hare Lepus tunidus and the grey-sided vote Clethrionomys rufocanus with captive animals We tested differences among trees within sites, among sites, and between two tree species (the mountain birch Betula pubescens ssp czerepanovii and the tea-leaved willow Salix phylicifolia ) In one of the sites, we also measured growth rates of autumnal moth Epirrita autumnata larvae on the same trees that were used m preference trials with the hares and voles The differences m palatability to hares and voles were greatest at the level of tree Species, both hares and voles preferred birches over willows, but with the hare there was some overlap in palatability between the tree species There were also large and significant differences among sites and among trees within sites Within sites, variation in tree palatability seemed to be larger among willows than among birches Hares and voles may select willows at least partly on the same basis, but there was no correlation between palatability of the trees to the mammals and the growth rate of the larvae of the autumnal moth on the same trees Variation in twig palatability to the hares and voles was so large at all levels (among trees within sites, among sites and between tree species) that we suggest it also has implications for food selection of these mammalian herbivores under natural conditions  相似文献   

17.
Abstract.
  • 1 Outbreaks of tussock moths (Orygia verusta Bdv.) on bush lupines (Lupinus arboreus Sims) may be very intense, although spatially localized, and may last >10 years. To understand better how such outbreaks may persist, we defoliated lupine bushes using variable realistic numbers of tussock moth larvae, and measured the immediate and delayed impacts of defoliation on the growth and seed production of lupine bushes.
  • 2 Immediate effects of defoliation included the production of new leaves that were significantly smaller in diameter and biomass, and lower in water content, than the new leaves of undamaged bushes. Also, seed output was reduced by up to 80% on heavily damaged bushes.
  • 3 In the longer term, surviving bushes recovered remarkably well, despite having received the full range of possible (survivable) insect densities. After 1 or 2 years’rapid growth, surviving bushes were not affected in terms of height, basal stem diameter or volume by their previous defoliation. However, there was a significant tendency for juvenile bushes to produce more seeds the more heavily they had been attacked the previous year.
  • 4 The ability of the host plant to recover, in terms of its biomass, helps to explain the sustained nature of the insect outbreak.
  相似文献   

18.
Over the last 20 years, ecological restoration of degraded habitats has become common in conservation practice. Mountain hares (Lepus timidus scoticus) were surveyed during 2017–2021 using 830 km of line transects in the Peak District National Park, England. Historically degraded bog areas were previously reported having low hare numbers. Following bog restoration, we found hare densities of 32.6 individuals km−2, notably higher than neighboring degraded (unrestored) bog with 24.4 hares km−2. Hare density on restored peatland was 2.7 times higher than on bogs managed for grouse shooting at 12.2 hares km−2 and 3.3 times higher than on heather moorland managed for grouse shooting at 10.0 hares km−2. Yearly estimates varied most on habitats managed for grouse, perhaps indicative of the impact of habitat management, for example, heather burning and/or possible hare culling to control potential tick‐borne louping ill virus in gamebirds. Acid grassland used for sheep farming had a similar density to grouse moorland at 11.8 hares km−2. Unmanaged dwarf shrub heath had the lowest density at 4.8 hares km−2. Hare populations are characterized by significant yearly fluctuations, those in the study area increasing by 60% between 2017 and 2018 before declining by ca. 15% by 2020 and remaining stable to 2021. During an earlier survey in 2002, total abundance throughout the Peak District National Park was estimated at 3361 (95% CI: 2431–4612) hares. The present study estimated 3562 (2291–5624) hares suggesting a stable population over the last two decades despite fluctuations likely influenced by weather and anthropogenic factors. Mountain hares in the Peak District favored bog habitats and were associated with restored peatland habitat. Wildlife management should be cognizant of hare density variation between habitats, which may have implications for local extinction risk.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The plant defense guild hypothesis for the evolution of plant secondary chemicals predicts that plant species defend themselves against generalist herbivores such as the snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus) in the Canadian boreal forest by evolving unique antifeedant chemicals. Plant species may coevolve in an ecosystem by presenting an array of chemicals to herbivores. We report further evidence for this idea from the presence of 2,4,6-trihydroxydihydrochalcone in the CH2Cl2 extracts of Populus balsamifera juvenile twigs. These extracts, added to rabbit chow, were offered to hares in choice tests. The bioassay established that the chemical acted as an antifeedant for hares.  相似文献   

20.
Raymond  Hewson 《Journal of Zoology》1968,154(2):249-262
Mountain hares were weighed during live trapping on a study area near Dufftown, Banffshire, from June 1958 to August 1966. Hares shot or killed by other means on the study area and elsewhere were also weighed. Females were heavier than males throughout the year and this difference became apparent in juveniles by August of their year of birth. Male hares lost weight during the breeding season (January to June) but regained it in late summer. Young hares gained weight initially at about 14 g per day, then at about 6 g per day to adult weight. Small juveniles, or those born late in the season, tended to become small adults, large or early juveniles to become large adults. Small hares moulted less completely andjbegan to breed later in the season than large hares. The effects of disease, starvation, severe weather and injury on hare weights were considered. Female weights were greater when the population was small, due to more late pregnancies or more embryos per female. Weight could not be used to distinguish between adult and juvenile hares above 2.1 kg, nor between young and older adults.  相似文献   

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