Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Wild Nature Institute, 15 North Main Street, Suite 208, Concord, NH, USA.
Oecologia. 2019 Oct;191(2):335-347. doi: 10.1007/s00442-019-04485-y. Epub 2019 Aug 27.
Fission-fusion dynamics hypothetically enable animals to exploit dispersed and ephemeral food resources while minimizing predation risk. Disentangling factors affecting group size and composition of fission-fusion species facilitates their management and conservation. We used a 6-year data set of 2888 group formations of Masai giraffes in Tanzania to investigate determinants of social group size and structure. We tested whether ecological (lion density, vegetation structure, and prevalence of primary forage plants), anthropogenic (proximity to human settlements), temporal (rainy or dry season), and social (local giraffe density, adult sex ratio, and proportion of calves) factors explained variation in group size and sex- and age-class composition. Food availability rather than predation risk mediated grouping dynamics of adult giraffes, while predation risk was the most important factor influencing congregations with calves. Smallest group sizes occurred during the food-limiting dry season. Where predation risk was greatest, groups with calves were in bushlands more than in open grasslands, but the groups were smaller in size, suggesting mothers adopted a strategy of hiding calves rather than a predator-detection-and-dilution strategy. Groups with calves also were farther from towns but closer to traditional human compounds (bomas). This may be due to lower predator densities, and thus reduced calf predation risk, near bomas but higher human disturbance near towns. Sex- and age-based differences in habitat use reflected nursing mothers' need for high-quality forage while also protecting their young from predation. Our results have implications for conservation and management of giraffes and other large-bodied, herd-forming ungulates in heterogeneous environments subject to anthropogenic threats.
裂变融合动态理论上使动物能够利用分散和短暂的食物资源,同时将捕食风险降到最低。 理清影响裂变融合物种群体大小和组成的因素有助于它们的管理和保护。 我们使用了坦桑尼亚马赛长颈鹿 6 年的 2888 个群体形成数据来研究社会群体大小和结构的决定因素。 我们测试了生态(狮子密度、植被结构和主要饲料植物的流行)、人为(靠近人类住区)、时间(雨季或旱季)和社会(当地长颈鹿密度、成年性别比和小牛比例)因素是否解释了群体大小和性别和年龄组成的变化。 食物供应而不是捕食风险调节了成年长颈鹿的分组动态,而捕食风险是影响有小牛的集会的最重要因素。 最小的群体大小发生在食物有限的旱季。 在捕食风险最大的地方,有小牛的群体在丛林中比在开阔的草原中更多,但群体规模较小,这表明母亲采取了隐藏小牛而不是捕食者检测和稀释策略。 有小牛的群体也离城镇更远,但离传统的人类聚居地(畜栏)更近。 这可能是由于在畜栏附近的捕食者密度较低,因此小牛的捕食风险降低,但在城镇附近人类干扰更高。 基于性别和年龄的栖息地利用差异反映了哺乳期母亲对高质量饲料的需求,同时也保护了她们的幼崽免受捕食。 我们的研究结果对保护和管理长颈鹿和其他在异质环境中受人为威胁的大型群居反刍动物具有重要意义。