Data from: Climatic warming and the future of bison as grazers
Climatic warming is likely to exacerbate nutritional stress and reduce weight gain in large mammalian herbivores by reducing plant nutritional quality. Yet accurate predictions of the effects of climatic warming on herbivores are limited by a poor understanding of how herbivore diet varies along cli...
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Zusammenfassung: | Climatic warming is likely to exacerbate nutritional stress and reduce
weight gain in large mammalian herbivores by reducing plant nutritional
quality. Yet accurate predictions of the effects of climatic warming on
herbivores are limited by a poor understanding of how herbivore diet
varies along climate gradients. We utilized DNA metabarcoding to
reconstruct seasonal variation in the diet of North American bison (Bison
bison) in two grasslands that differ in mean annual temperature by 6 °C.
Here, we show that associated with greater nutritional stress in warmer
climates, bison consistently consumed fewer graminoids and more shrubs and
forbs, i.e. eudicots. Bison in the warmer grassland consumed a lower
proportion of C3 grass, but not a greater proportion of C4 grass. Instead,
bison diet in the warmer grassland had a greater proportion of N2-fixing
eudicots, regularly comprising >60% of their protein intake in
spring and fall. Although bison have been considered strict grazers, as
climatic warming reduces grass protein concentrations, bison may have to
attempt to compensate by grazing less and browsing more. Promotion of
high-protein, palatable eudicots or increasing the protein concentrations
of grasses will be critical to minimizing warming-imposed nutritional
stress for bison and perhaps other large mammalian herbivores. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.vc6gc |