Data for: Wolf diet in the Notecka Forest, Western Poland

We assessed the diet composition of wolves inhabiting Notecka Forest ( ca . 1,400 km 2 ) in Western Poland based on the analysis of scats (n=261) collected in 2008-2021. The study revealed that wolves in this large forest tract, consisting mainly of pine monocultures, consumed primarily wild ungulat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nowak, Sabina, Mysłajek, Robert
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2024
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.vq83bk427
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Summary:We assessed the diet composition of wolves inhabiting Notecka Forest ( ca . 1,400 km 2 ) in Western Poland based on the analysis of scats (n=261) collected in 2008-2021. The study revealed that wolves in this large forest tract, consisting mainly of pine monocultures, consumed primarily wild ungulates (95.2% of consumed biomass). The roe deer was the essential food item (47.8%), followed by the red deer ( Cervus elaphus ) (25.1%) and the wild boar ( Sus scrofa ) (18.4%). Wolves supplemented their diet with medium-sized wild mammals, mainly the European hare ( Lepus europaeus ) (2.8%) and the Eurasian beaver ( Castor fiber ) (1.9%). The food niche was narrow ( B =1.1), and there was no difference in food composition between the spring-summer and autumn-winter seasons. We emphasize the significance of the smallest European wild ruminant, roe deer, in the diet of wolves inhabiting Central European Plains. Funding provided by: National Science Center Crossref Funder Registry ID: https://ror.org/03ha2q922 Award Number: 2019/35/O/NZ8/01550 Funding provided by: National Science Center Crossref Funder Registry ID: https://ror.org/03ha2q922 Award Number: 2020/39/B/NZ9/01829 We estimated the composition of the wolf diet by analyzing the content of their scats (n=261) collected opportunistically across the entire Notecka Forest, Poland, from 2008 to 2021. Fieldwork was performed within long-term projects dedicated to the assessment of population dynamics (Nowak and Mysłajek 2016), habitat selection (Nowak et al. 2017), and genetics (Hulva et al. 2018, Szewczyk et al. 2019, Kloch et al. 2021) of wolves recovering in Western Poland. The gathering of samples over many years allows us to take into account long-term fluctuations of wild ungulate numbers. Scats were collected while walking or driving along forest roads, and special attention was paid to junctions of roads often used by wolves for marking territory (Stępniak et al. 2020). Such an approach gives the same results as the analyses of scats collected at home sites ...