Correlates of survival rates for 10 African ungulate populations: density, rainfall and predation

Through reconciling census totals with population structure, annual survival rates were estimated for the juvenile, yearling and adult stages of 10 ungulate species over 14 years or longer in South Africa's Kruger National Park. During this period four species maintained high abundance levels, while...

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Autores principales: Owen-Smith, N., Mason, D.R., Ogutu, J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/32975
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author Owen-Smith, N.
Mason, D.R.
Ogutu, J.
author_browse Mason, D.R.
Ogutu, J.
Owen-Smith, N.
author_facet Owen-Smith, N.
Mason, D.R.
Ogutu, J.
author_sort Owen-Smith, N.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Through reconciling census totals with population structure, annual survival rates were estimated for the juvenile, yearling and adult stages of 10 ungulate species over 14 years or longer in South Africa's Kruger National Park. During this period four species maintained high abundance levels, while six species declined progressively in abundance. Multiple regression models fitted to these estimates indicated that juvenile survival was sensitive to annual variability in rainfall for most of these species, especially in the dry season component, but with no density feedback apparent. Rainfall components affected adult survival in several of the declining species, while negative density dependence in adult survival was evident for three of the four species that maintained high abundance. A negative effect of past prey availability, indexing putative changes in predator abundance, on adult survival was more strongly supported statistically among the declining species than the lagged effect of prior rainfall, potentially affecting herbaceous vegetation cover and composition. The high sensitivity of juvenile survival to environmental variability among these ungulate species was consistent with the general pattern identified for large mammalian herbivores, although the absence of any survival response counteracting the density declines was surprising. The susceptibility of adult survival to environmental influences for the declining species appeared unusual and probably reflected an interaction between nutritional shortfalls and a numerical increase in lions, preying largely upon the adult segment of these species. The ungulate species that persisted at high abundance seemed resistant to effects of rainfall on food resources and evidently drove the changes in predator abundance. The sharp density effect on adult survival among these species could indicate prey switching by lions following changes in their relative availability. Findings extend past generalizations about the demographic processes underlying the population dynamics of large mammalian herbivores and reveal how the survival rates of particular population segments respond differently to environmental influences. Demographic patterns help reveal the interplay of changing resource supplies, predation pressure and population abundance on population changes.
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spelling CGSpace329752023-12-27T20:00:19Z Correlates of survival rates for 10 African ungulate populations: density, rainfall and predation Owen-Smith, N. Mason, D.R. Ogutu, J. ungulates survival population density rain predation demography nature reserves vital statistics national parks Through reconciling census totals with population structure, annual survival rates were estimated for the juvenile, yearling and adult stages of 10 ungulate species over 14 years or longer in South Africa's Kruger National Park. During this period four species maintained high abundance levels, while six species declined progressively in abundance. Multiple regression models fitted to these estimates indicated that juvenile survival was sensitive to annual variability in rainfall for most of these species, especially in the dry season component, but with no density feedback apparent. Rainfall components affected adult survival in several of the declining species, while negative density dependence in adult survival was evident for three of the four species that maintained high abundance. A negative effect of past prey availability, indexing putative changes in predator abundance, on adult survival was more strongly supported statistically among the declining species than the lagged effect of prior rainfall, potentially affecting herbaceous vegetation cover and composition. The high sensitivity of juvenile survival to environmental variability among these ungulate species was consistent with the general pattern identified for large mammalian herbivores, although the absence of any survival response counteracting the density declines was surprising. The susceptibility of adult survival to environmental influences for the declining species appeared unusual and probably reflected an interaction between nutritional shortfalls and a numerical increase in lions, preying largely upon the adult segment of these species. The ungulate species that persisted at high abundance seemed resistant to effects of rainfall on food resources and evidently drove the changes in predator abundance. The sharp density effect on adult survival among these species could indicate prey switching by lions following changes in their relative availability. Findings extend past generalizations about the demographic processes underlying the population dynamics of large mammalian herbivores and reveal how the survival rates of particular population segments respond differently to environmental influences. Demographic patterns help reveal the interplay of changing resource supplies, predation pressure and population abundance on population changes. 2005-07 2013-07-03T05:25:51Z 2013-07-03T05:25:51Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/32975 en Limited Access Wiley Journal of Animal Ecology;74(4): 774-788
spellingShingle ungulates
survival
population density
rain
predation
demography
nature reserves
vital statistics
national parks
Owen-Smith, N.
Mason, D.R.
Ogutu, J.
Correlates of survival rates for 10 African ungulate populations: density, rainfall and predation
title Correlates of survival rates for 10 African ungulate populations: density, rainfall and predation
title_full Correlates of survival rates for 10 African ungulate populations: density, rainfall and predation
title_fullStr Correlates of survival rates for 10 African ungulate populations: density, rainfall and predation
title_full_unstemmed Correlates of survival rates for 10 African ungulate populations: density, rainfall and predation
title_short Correlates of survival rates for 10 African ungulate populations: density, rainfall and predation
title_sort correlates of survival rates for 10 african ungulate populations density rainfall and predation
topic ungulates
survival
population density
rain
predation
demography
nature reserves
vital statistics
national parks
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/32975
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