Macro-Nutritional Adaptive Strategies of Moose (Alces alces) Related to Population Density

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Animals living in variable environments require flexible nutritional strategies for dealing with nutritional uncertainty. We investigated the diet and macro-nutritional strategies of male and female moose in six sites in northeast China, representing variable habitat quality and usin...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Animals
Main Authors: Ma, Yingjie, Bao, Heng, Bencini, Roberta, Raubenheimer, David, Dou, Hongliang, Liu, Hui, Wang, Sirui, Jiang, Guangshun
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2019
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Online Access:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7022907/
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31906149
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10010073
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Summary:SIMPLE SUMMARY: Animals living in variable environments require flexible nutritional strategies for dealing with nutritional uncertainty. We investigated the diet and macro-nutritional strategies of male and female moose in six sites in northeast China, representing variable habitat quality and using spatially explicit capture-recapture to determine the local population density of moose during the snowy seasons. The moose populations experienced different forage availability and quality. Female and male moose equally tended to maintain a specifically balanced diet with a high ratio of protein and total nonstructural carbohydrates (N:C) across all populations, despite their differences in forage availability. A higher ratio of N:C in the vegetation was a positive indicator for population density. ABSTRACT: The distribution area of moose in China has been shrinking back toward the north and northeast because of climate change and human disturbance, and the population number has been declining. Between 2011 and 2015, we studied moose at six sites in the northeast of China during the snowy seasons. We collected fecal samples and plant samples that were used to estimate population densities for moose, as well as their macro-nutrient selection. Out of a total of 257 fecal samples collected at six sites, we identified a total of 120 individual moose (57 females and 63 males). The population density (moose/km(2) ± SE) was highest at Hanma with 0.305 ± 0.064 moose/km(2) and lowest at Meitian with only 0.028 ± 0.013 moose/km(2). Forage availability was different among sites, with the lowest availability at Mohe (58.17 number/20 m(2)) and highest was Zhanhe (250.44 number/20 m(2)). Moose at Zhanhe, Hanma, and Nanwenghe had a balanced diet with higher N:C (1:7), while at Meitian, Shuanghe and Mohe the N:C was 1:8. Our results indicate that the southern areas had low forage quality and quantity and this may be the reason for the distribution of the population of moose shrinking northward.