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The territorial system of the kob antelope (Kobus kob kob) in the Comoé National Park, Côte d'Ivoire
Authors:Frauke Fischer  K. Eduard Linsenmair
Affiliation:Theodor-Boveri-Institute of Biosciences, Zoology III, Tropical Biology and Animal Ecology, University of Wuerzburg, 97074 Wuerzburg, Germany
Abstract:The territorial system of kob antelopes in the Comoé National Park, Côte d'Ivoire, was studied from March 1993 until April 1997. Whereas size and shape of territories remained constant between 1993 and 1994, the number of territories decreased from 1994 onwards. A decline of the population density probably led to the decline in territory numbers and also to variations in size and shape of the remaining territories. The decline of kob numbers is the result of heavy poaching in the study area. Whereas a lekking system was present in the study area prior to 1975 when the population density was approximately 14.4 kobs/km2, males switched to the resource defence territorial system present today after the population density decreased to 12.5/km2 in 1993 and finally to 2.3/km2 in 1997. Compared to other research areas with higher population densities, territories in the Comoé National Park are larger, almost all adult males are capable to defend a territory, fights over territories are rare and loss of territory tenureship is almost exclusively due to the death of the territorial male. We suggest that those differences can all be related to the low population density in the study area.
Keywords:Comoé National Park    Kobus kob    territoriality
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