德克萨斯州牧场上外来大羚羊的社会动态

Elizabeth Cary Mungall, Susan Margaret Cooper
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摘要

本项目在美国德克萨斯州中部一个202公顷的大型牧场牧场,研究了不同组合下北非大瞪羚(Nanger dama ruficollis)的社会动态。在德克萨斯州的这一地区有许多野生动物牧场,饲养着这些极度濒危的大瞪羚。因此,增加对这些牧场动物如何在不同社会组合下进行自我分类的了解,不仅可以帮助管理者维持和扩大他们的畜群,而且还可以增加数量,使该物种在其本国的地位仍然不稳定的情况下有更好的机会保持生存。调查对象为:(1)7只成年雌虫,有1只青春期雄虫和1只年轻成年雄虫;(2)同一只成年雌虫和未成熟雄虫,无成年雄虫;(3)同一只成年雌虫和正在成熟的年轻雄虫,有多只成年雄虫。研究表明,如果有明智的管理,即使有雌性存在,多只成年雄性也可以以最小的攻击性共存于大型牧场。所有的瞪羚都戴着gps无线电项圈(7只成年雌性,1只未成熟雄性,1到3只成年雄性,具体取决于项目的阶段)。每3小时记录一次位置。每月进行一次目视观察。项目时间为2014年12月19日至2016年6月30日。没有最初的成年雄象,雌象群分裂,群体价值下降。随着新的成年雄鹿的加入,两只雄鹿将牧场分割开来,从而在空间上进行分离。成熟的雄鸟一直保持着它的核心区域,主要的雌鸟群就呆在那里,但现在暂时分开了。成年雄性专注于雌性喜欢的区域,但不指导雌性的行动。这些雄性与雌性之间的关系不如雌性与雌性之间的关系密切。估计牧场上最大可能的成年雄性必须考虑到坡度、植被密度和雌性喜欢的地点。仅有的两项类似研究确定了在更干燥的条件下更大的核心区域,但其他研究无法在没有项圈的情况下详细评估群体动态。
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Social Dynamics of Exotic Dama Gazelles (Nanger dama) on Texas Ranch Land
This project examines social dynamics of North African dama gazelles (Nanger dama ruficollis) under different combinations in a large, 202 ha, rangeland pasture in Central Texas, USA. There are many wildlife ranches in this part of Texas that keep herds of these critically endangered dama gazelles. Therefore, an increased understanding of how these pasture animals may assort themselves under different social combinations can not only help managers sustain and grow their herds but also bolster the numbers that give the species a better chance to remain viable while status in their native countries remains precarious. Investigated were: (1) 7 adult females with one adolescent male and one young adult male, (2) the same adult females and immature male without any adult males, (3) the same adult females and the young, now maturing, male with multiple adult males. It was shown that multiple adult males can co-exist in large pastures with minimal aggression, even when females are present, provided there is informed management. All the gazelles wore GPS-radio collars (7 adult females, 1 immature male, and 1-to-3 adult males depending on phase of the project). Locations were recorded every 3 hr. Visual observations were made monthly. Project duration was December 19, 2014, until June 30, 2016. Without the initial adult male, the female herd split and association values declined. With new adult males added, 2 divided the pasture, thus, separating spatially. The maturing male kept his core area where the main female group stayed, but now separated temporally. Adult males focused on areas favored by females but did not direct the movements of the females. These males did not associate as closely with females as females did with each other. Estimating maximum possible adult males for a pasture must allow for slope, vegetation density, and sites favored by females. The only two similar studies determined larger core areas under more xeric conditions, but these other studies could not assess group dynamics in detail without collars on more animals.
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