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Temporal resource partitioning of wildebeest carcasses by scavengers after riverine mass mortality events

机译:河流大众死亡率后清除师屠体屠体的时间资源分区

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Scavengers play an important role in nutrient recycling and disease control, and this role may be particularly critical after mass mortality events, such as those caused by epidemics, culling, or natural disasters. Current work on scavenger ecology has focused on use of single carcasses, but behaviors are likely to be different at mass mortality events, in which high resource abundance can prolong the spatial and temporal availability of carcasses. Little is currently known about how scavengers respond to large die‐offs and understanding scavenger use and succession patterns at mass mortality events has important implications for disease ecology. We used photographic time series and river‐side surveys of scavengers using carcasses to investigate scavenger use and succession on wildebeest carcasses that resulted from annual mass drownings in the Mara River, Kenya. In addition, we used telemetry data for tagged avian scavengers to assess individual use of mass drownings. Density of avian scavengers per carcass was almost two orders of magnitude lower at mass drownings than has been documented previously for single carcasses on land. Scavengers demonstrated patterns of temporal resource partitioning, with large‐bodied avian scavengers more common initially, followed by small‐bodied avian scavengers, and then by insectivorous birds and non‐avian scavengers. Avian scavengers also differed in daily activity patterns, with marabou storks more common in the morning and late afternoon and white‐backed and Rüppell’s vultures more common mid‐day. Telemetry data indicated that approximately half of tagged vultures used mass drowning events but only spent a small proportion of their time there, suggesting that competition still plays an important role in scavenger dynamics at mass mortality events and that the rewards of such abundant resources may be offset by the risk of foraging in the river. Further research on scavenger behavior during mass mortality events is needed to better understand the role of scavengers in decomposition of carcasses and disease control during these events.
机译:清除剂在营养回收和疾病控制中发挥着重要作用,并且在大规模死亡事件发生后,这种作用可能是特别关键的,例如由流行病,剔除或自然灾害引起的那些。当前关于清道夫生态的工作侧重于使用单一屠体,但行为可能在大规模死亡事件中不同,其中高资源丰富可以延长尸体的空间和时间可用性。目前讨论了清除者如何应对大型措施,并了解质量死亡事件的清道夫使用和继承模式对疾病生态学产生重要影响。我们使用屠体使用屠体进行淘气者的摄影时间序列和河边调查,以调查肯尼亚玛拉河的年度大量溺水的牛羚尸体和连续。此外,我们使用遥测数据进行标记的Avian Scavengers评估个人使用大众溺水。禽流留的密度每胴体几乎比以前在土地上的单个尸体上记录的大规模溺水的数量级几乎减少了两个数量级。清除剂展示了时间资源分区的模式,最初拥有大型禽的清除剂,其次是小型禽流心的清除剂,然后由食虫鸟类和非禽的清除剂。禽流留器也有日常活动模式不同,玛拉贝鹳在早上和下午晚些时候和白背和鲁普尔的秃鹫中的日期中的秃鹫更常见。遥测数据表明,大约一半的标记秃鹫使用了大规模溺水事件,但只花了一小部分他们的时间,这表明竞争仍然在质量死亡事件中的清道动态中发挥着重要作用,并且这种丰富的资源的奖励可能抵消通过在河里觅食的风险。需要进一步研究质量死亡事件期间的清道夫行为,以更好地了解清除剂在这些事件中屠体和疾病控制分解中的作用。

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