Population dynamics of two species of hyraxes in the Matobo National Park, Zimbabwe
Populations of the syntopic rock hyrax, Procavia capensis (Pallas), and yellow‐spotted rock hyrax, Heterohyrax brucei (Gray), in the 42,400‐ha Matobo National Park (MNP), Zimbabwe, were characterized from 1992 to 1996. The Procavia:Heterohyrax species ratio varied significantly (P< 0.01) across y...
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Veröffentlicht in: | African journal of ecology 1998-09, Vol.36 (3), p.221-233 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Populations of the syntopic rock hyrax, Procavia capensis (Pallas), and yellow‐spotted rock hyrax, Heterohyrax brucei (Gray), in the 42,400‐ha Matobo National Park (MNP), Zimbabwe, were characterized from 1992 to 1996. The Procavia:Heterohyrax species ratio varied significantly (P< 0.01) across years from 1.43:1.00 to 0.74:1.00. Estimates of abundance (31,114–39,869 Procavia and 21,833–46,619 Heterohyrax) and densities (0.73–0.94 Procavia ha−1 and 0.51–1.10 Heterohyrax ha−1) indicated that populations had experienced a considerable decline since 1978, with drought suspected as the principal cause. The Heterohyrax population fluctuated more than the Procavia population. Although sex ratios of individuals trapped and collected in 1991–92 did not differ from 1:1 for either species, female Procavia nearly outnumbered males (P< 0.10) among the prey of black eagles (Aquila verreauxii Lesson), suggesting the possibility of divergence in the social organization and vigilance of the two species. In each year of the study, pups comprised < 30% of individuals in the two populations after the interspecifically synchronous annual birth event in March–April, and evidence exists for an effect by drought on fecundity. Females appear to breed, on average, no more than every other year. We estimated juvenile (0–1 year of age) mortality at 52.4–61.3% for Heterohyrax and 59.6–75.6% for Procavia. Mean mass (±1 SE) of Procavia adults was 3.4±0.2 kg and of Heterohyrax adults, 2.4±0.1 kg. Procavia had a significantly (P< 0.01) greater condition index (body mass/total length) than Heterohyrax. Adults are especially important reservoirs of biomass for the diverse and numerous predators of the MNP, accounting for > 84% of hyrax biomass intraspecifically.
On a défini, de 1992 à 1996, les caractéristiques des deux damans des rochers Procavia capensis (Pallas) et Heterohyrax brucei (Gray) dans les 42.400 ha que couvre le Parc National de Matobo (MNP) au Zimbabwe. Le rapport Procavia /Heterohyrax a varié significativement (P |
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ISSN: | 0141-6707 1365-2028 |
DOI: | 10.1046/j.1365-2028.1998.00145.x |