Data from: Effects of divergent migratory strategies on access to resources for Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer caffer)
Populations of large herbivores frequently display divergent migratory strategies, a likely consequence of the trade-off between the costs and benefits of migration. Globally, physical and environmental barriers disrupt migrations, leading to increased residency, which can have detrimental consequen...
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Zusammenfassung: | Populations of large herbivores frequently display divergent migratory
strategies, a likely consequence of the trade-off between the costs and
benefits of migration. Globally, physical and environmental barriers
disrupt migrations, leading to increased residency, which can have
detrimental consequences. In the Okavango Delta, Botswana, veterinary
cordon fences erected in 1982 may have caused enforced residency in some
subpopulations of Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer caffer). We used data from
GPS-enabled collars fitted to females in 1 resident and 1 migratory
subpopulation of buffalo to test the hypotheses that 1) residents have
access to less-productive forage than migrants, 2) residents occupy
smaller home ranges and live in smaller herds than migrants, 3)
reproductive productivity is lower in resident herds, and 4) residents
have poorer body condition than migrants. Forage characteristics varied
between resident and migrant ranges, both between and within seasons.
Reproductive productivity and body condition did not differ between
subpopulations, but residents occupied smaller home ranges during the
rainy season and lived in smaller herds than migrants. Enforced residency
could have decreased carrying capacity when the fence was erected, so
resident buffalo may have adapted by forming smaller herds, allowing them
to maintain their body condition. The area that residents occupied was
located in a more central region of the Okavango Delta than that of
migrants; therefore, this area would receive higher levels of nutrients
from the annual flood, which would have increased heterogeneity in
resident ranges, potentially compensating for effects of disrupted
migrations. These results highlight the importance of conserving
landscapes with spatially and temporally heterogeneous resources to buffer
effects of anthropogenic activities such as artificial barriers on
migrations. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.7bm4d |