Elena Mariotti, F. Parrini, C. Louw, Jason P. Marshal
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引用次数: 1
摘要
在分散机会有限的围栏保护区,资源和限制在空间和时间上各不相同,影响食草动物的行为。资源的分布、可用性和质量、燃烧面积和潜在的种间竞争都在维持非洲大型同域食草动物种群中发挥着作用。研究了不同季节、不同景观类型的南非自然保护区3种反刍动物——黑、蓝角马(Connochaetes gnou, C. taurinus)、红羚羊(Alcelaphus buselaphus)和非反刍动物平原斑马(Equus quagga)的资源、限制和种间关系对生境利用的影响。黑角马、蓝角马和红角马倾向于开阔的草地景观,植被均质;斑马倾向于树木繁茂的草地景观,植被异质性较大。燃烧面积和植被绿化率对所有物种都很重要,而海拔高度仅对黑角马有限制。其他物种的存在或缺失对塑造黑角马和蓝角马的景观利用很重要,这表明存在竞争的可能性。我们的研究结果证实了异质性的重要性,特别是计划燃烧制度在维持这种异质性方面的重要作用,以维持小型围栏自然保护区中多物种食草动物的组合,在这些保护区中,使用相似资源的物种之间可能会产生竞争。
Habitat Use by a Large Herbivore Guild in a Fenced South African Protected Area
In fenced protected areas with limited opportunities to disperse, resources and constraints vary in space and time, affecting herbivore behaviour. The distribution, availability and quality of resources, burnt areas, and potential inter-specific competition all play a role in sustaining populations of large sympatric African herbivores. We investigated the role of resources, constraints and interspecific relationships on habitat use by three ruminants – black and blue wildebeest (Connochaetes gnou, C. taurinus) and red hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus), and a non-ruminant, plains zebra (Equus quagga), across seasons and in different landscape types in a South African reserve. Black wildebeest, blue wildebeest and red hartebeest preferred the open grassland landscape, with homogeneous vegetation, while zebra favoured the wooded grassland landscape, with more heterogeneous vegetation. Burnt areas and vegetation greenness were important for all species, while elevation represented a constraint for black wildebeest only. The presence/absence of other species was important in shaping landscape use for black and blue wildebeest, and this suggests the possibility of competition. Our findings confirm the importance of heterogeneity and, in particular, the important role of a planned burning regime in maintaining such heterogeneity to sustain multi-species herbivore assemblages in small fenced nature reserves, where competition might arise between species using similar resources.