Fifty years of European ungulate dietary studies: a synthesis

Over recent decades, ungulate populations across Europe have undergone a rapid recovery. While this constitutes a conservation success, there is increasing concern about their impacts on shared resources with humans. Understanding ungulate food choices is crucial for predicting such impacts. Numerou...

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Main Authors: Spitzer, Robert, Felton, Annika, Landman, Marietjie, Singh, Navinder, Widemo, Fredrik, Cromsigt, Joris
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.m905qftz9
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author Spitzer, Robert
Felton, Annika
Landman, Marietjie
Singh, Navinder
Widemo, Fredrik
Cromsigt, Joris
author_facet Spitzer, Robert
Felton, Annika
Landman, Marietjie
Singh, Navinder
Widemo, Fredrik
Cromsigt, Joris
author_sort Spitzer, Robert
collection Zenodo
description Over recent decades, ungulate populations across Europe have undergone a rapid recovery. While this constitutes a conservation success, there is increasing concern about their impacts on shared resources with humans. Understanding ungulate food choices is crucial for predicting such impacts. Numerous studies have focused on single species or communities at narrow spatial scales. Here, we used 265 published diets from 87 European studies to investigate patterns of resource use by four common deer species (moose Alces alces , red deer Cervus elaphus , roe deer Capreolus capreolus , and fallow deer Dama dama ), and wild boar Sus scrofa at the continental scale. On average, deer diets separated mostly along a gradient from grass to browse. Fallow deer diets contained the most and moose diets the least amount of grass, but we also found large intraspecific variation among all deer species. Diets of roe deer, a presumed browser, frequently contained ≥ 25% grass. Wild boar diet contained grass in amounts similar to red deer but otherwise differed strongly from deer diets. All five ungulate species shifted to eating higher proportions of woody browse during winter. Habitat influenced variation in intraspecific diets, but the proportions of key forage types related to feeding type (i.e., grass for intermediate feeders red and fallow deer, and shrubs for the browsers moose and roe deer) remained fairly consisted across habitat types. In northern and central Europe, diet similarity between roe deer and red deer was highest during winter and spring and lowest during summer and autumn but remained constant across the seasons in southern Europe. We foresee that, as interspecific interactions driven by land-use and climatic changes increase across Europe, further monitoring and testing will be needed to understand the dynamics of dietary niche partitioning among ungulates.
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genre Alces alces
genre_facet Alces alces
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.m905qftz9
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spelling ftzenodo:oai:zenodo.org:3977644 2025-01-16T18:44:46+00:00 Fifty years of European ungulate dietary studies: a synthesis Spitzer, Robert Felton, Annika Landman, Marietjie Singh, Navinder Widemo, Fredrik Cromsigt, Joris 2020-08-06 https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.m905qftz9 unknown Zenodo https://zenodo.org/communities/dryad https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.m905qftz9 oai:zenodo.org:3977644 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode ungulate diets Alces alces Cervus elaphus Dama dama Sus scrofa Capreolus capreolus info:eu-repo/semantics/other 2020 ftzenodo https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.m905qftz9 2024-12-05T02:44:37Z Over recent decades, ungulate populations across Europe have undergone a rapid recovery. While this constitutes a conservation success, there is increasing concern about their impacts on shared resources with humans. Understanding ungulate food choices is crucial for predicting such impacts. Numerous studies have focused on single species or communities at narrow spatial scales. Here, we used 265 published diets from 87 European studies to investigate patterns of resource use by four common deer species (moose Alces alces , red deer Cervus elaphus , roe deer Capreolus capreolus , and fallow deer Dama dama ), and wild boar Sus scrofa at the continental scale. On average, deer diets separated mostly along a gradient from grass to browse. Fallow deer diets contained the most and moose diets the least amount of grass, but we also found large intraspecific variation among all deer species. Diets of roe deer, a presumed browser, frequently contained ≥ 25% grass. Wild boar diet contained grass in amounts similar to red deer but otherwise differed strongly from deer diets. All five ungulate species shifted to eating higher proportions of woody browse during winter. Habitat influenced variation in intraspecific diets, but the proportions of key forage types related to feeding type (i.e., grass for intermediate feeders red and fallow deer, and shrubs for the browsers moose and roe deer) remained fairly consisted across habitat types. In northern and central Europe, diet similarity between roe deer and red deer was highest during winter and spring and lowest during summer and autumn but remained constant across the seasons in southern Europe. We foresee that, as interspecific interactions driven by land-use and climatic changes increase across Europe, further monitoring and testing will be needed to understand the dynamics of dietary niche partitioning among ungulates. Other/Unknown Material Alces alces Zenodo
spellingShingle ungulate diets
Alces alces
Cervus elaphus
Dama dama
Sus scrofa
Capreolus capreolus
Spitzer, Robert
Felton, Annika
Landman, Marietjie
Singh, Navinder
Widemo, Fredrik
Cromsigt, Joris
Fifty years of European ungulate dietary studies: a synthesis
title Fifty years of European ungulate dietary studies: a synthesis
title_full Fifty years of European ungulate dietary studies: a synthesis
title_fullStr Fifty years of European ungulate dietary studies: a synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Fifty years of European ungulate dietary studies: a synthesis
title_short Fifty years of European ungulate dietary studies: a synthesis
title_sort fifty years of european ungulate dietary studies: a synthesis
topic ungulate diets
Alces alces
Cervus elaphus
Dama dama
Sus scrofa
Capreolus capreolus
topic_facet ungulate diets
Alces alces
Cervus elaphus
Dama dama
Sus scrofa
Capreolus capreolus
url https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.m905qftz9