Data from: Large mammal declines and the incipient loss of mammal-bird mutualisms in an African savanna ecosystem
Over the past half-century, large mammal populations have declined substantially throughout East Africa, mainly due to habitat loss and unsustainable direct exploitation. While it has been acknowledged that the loss of large mammals can have direct and cascading effects on community composition and...
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Zusammenfassung: | Over the past half-century, large mammal populations have declined
substantially throughout East Africa, mainly due to habitat loss and
unsustainable direct exploitation. While it has been acknowledged that the
loss of large mammals can have direct and cascading effects on community
composition and ecosystem characteristics, limited quantitative work has
been done on how declines of large herbivore populations impacts the
abundance of mutualistic symbionts. Using a space-for-time observational
approach, we quantified the large mammal community alongside the
densities, host preferences and behaviors of mutualistic red-billed
oxpeckers (Buphagus erythrorhynchus), and yellow-billed oxpeckers
(Buphagus africanus) in northern Tanzania. At the landscape scale, mammal
community composition was substantially less diverse in highly
human-dominated areas when compared with more protected areas, with an
observed complete loss of large wild mammal species in two study areas.
Mirroring this trend, oxpecker densities were lowest in the least
protected areas, and highest in fully protected areas. Using resource
selection functions implemented via generalized linear models at different
scales, we found that oxpeckers (1) were predominantly (67% of red-billed
oxpeckers; 70% of yellow-billed oxpeckers) feeding on larger (between
500kg and 1500kg) ungulate host species within the mammal community, (2)
usually preferred feeding on larger individuals (adults and males) within
a specific host species population, and (3) preferred hosts that were more
tolerant of their presence. In particular, cattle were especially
intolerant of oxpecker presence and were relatively effective in
displacing oxpeckers. We found little evidence that oxpecker feeding was
parasitic across all host species; wound feeding was only observed on
giraffe, comprising 6% and 4% of feeding behavior in red-billed and
yellow-billed oxpeckers respectively. Thus, a loss of large-bodied and
oxpecker tolerant host species is a likely explanation for declines of
oxpecker populations in human dominated landscapes, which may have further
cascading effects. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.9s03863 |