Stable isotope series from elephant ivory reveal lifetime histories of a true dietary generalist

Longitudinal studies have revealed how variation in resource use within consumer populations can impact their dynamics and functional significance in communities. Here, we investigate multi-decadal diet variations within individuals of a keystone megaherbivore species, the African elephant (Loxodont...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 2012-06, Vol.279 (1737), p.2433-2441
Hauptverfasser: Codron, Jacqueline, Codron, Daryl, Sponheimer, Matt, Kirkman, Kevin, Duffy, Kevin J, Raubenheimer, Erich J, Mélice, Jean-Luc, Grant, Rina, Clauss, Marcus, Lee-Thorp, Julia A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Longitudinal studies have revealed how variation in resource use within consumer populations can impact their dynamics and functional significance in communities. Here, we investigate multi-decadal diet variations within individuals of a keystone megaherbivore species, the African elephant (Loxodonta africana), using serial stable isotope analysis of tusks from the Kruger National Park, South Africa. These records, representing the longest continuous diet histories documented for any extant species, reveal extensive seasonal and annual variations in isotopic—and hence dietary—niches of individuals, but little variation between them. Lack of niche distinction across individuals contrasts several recent studies, which found relatively high levels of individual niche specialization in various taxa. Our result is consistent with theory that individual mammal herbivores are nutritionally constrained to maintain broad diet niches. Individual diet specialization would also be a costly strategy for large-bodied taxa foraging over wide areas in spatio-temporally heterogeneous environments. High levels of within-individual diet variability occurred within and across seasons, and persisted despite an overall increase in inferred C4 grass consumption through the twentieth century. We suggest that switching between C3 browsing and C4 grazing over extended time scales facilitates elephant survival through environmental change, and could even allow recovery of overused resources.
ISSN:0962-8452
1471-2954
1471-2945
DOI:10.1098/rspb.2011.2472