| Literature DB >> 24421887 |
Corinne J Kendall1, Munir Z Virani2, J Grant C Hopcraft3, Keith L Bildstein4, Daniel I Rubenstein5.
Abstract
The ongoing global decline in vulture populations raises major conservation concerns, but little is known about the factors that mediate scavenger habitat use, in particular the importance of abundance of live prey versus prey mortality. We test this using data from the Serengeti-Mara ecosystem in East Africa. The two hypotheses that prey abundance or prey mortality are the main drivers of vulture habitat use provide alternative predictions. If vultures select areas based only on prey abundance, we expect tracked vultures to remain close to herds of migratory wildebeest regardless of season. However, if vultures select areas where mortality rates are greatest then we expect vultures to select the driest regions, where animals are more likely to die of starvation, and to be attracted to migratory wildebeest only during the dry season when wildebeest mortality is greatest. We used data from GSM-GPS transmitters to assess the relationship between three vulture species and migratory wildebeest in the Mara-Serengeti ecosystem. Results indicate that vultures preferentially cluster around migratory herds only during the dry season, when herds experience their highest mortality. Additionally during the wet season, Ruppell's and Lappet-faced vultures select relatively dry areas, based on Normalized Difference Vegetation Index, whereas White-backed vultures preferred wetter areas during the wet season. Differences in habitat use among species may mediate coexistence in this scavenger guild. In general, our results suggest that prey abundance is not the primary driver of avian scavenger habitat use. The apparent reliance of vultures on non-migratory ungulates during the wet season has important conservation implications for vultures in light of on-going declines in non-migratory ungulate species and use of poisons in unprotected areas.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24421887 PMCID: PMC3885425 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0083470
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Sample size by species.
| Species | Individuals | # of Juveniles | Days | Average days per individual |
| Ruppell's vulture | 15 | 1 | 1800 | 120 |
| White-backed vulture | 12 | 4 | 2276 | 190 |
| Lappet-faced vulture | 12 | 6 | 1747 | 146 |
Figure 1Random point distance minus vulture data point distance to wildebeest herds (km) by season and species.
Note: Values near zero suggest the distribution of vulture movement is no different than random, while positive values suggest vultures are closer to wildebeest than by chance alone and negative values would suggest vultures are farther from wildebeest than by chance alone.
Figure 2Vulture movement in relation to wildebeest migration across four seasons.
GLMM model for habitat selectivity in relation to proximity to wildebeest and NDVI.
| Variables | Wildebeest (AIC = 74462) | NDVI (AIC = 101156) |
| Intercept | –16.5 (21.3) | 210.7 (149.45 |
| Season (Wet to dry) | –17.2 (7.0) | 195.6 (82.8) |
| Season (Dry) | –78.4 (4.9) | 661.6 (58.9) |
| Season (Dry to wet) | –13.4 (5.2) | 219.6 (62.3) |
| Species (Ruppell’s) | 10.8 (24.4) | –476.7 (170.9) |
| Species (Lappet-faced) | 41.4 (25.8) | –325.5 (177.9) |
| Breeding Status (breeding) | 7.4 (21.1) | –333.0 (147.3) |
| Number of individuals | 39 | 38 |
| Number of days | 5823 | 5708 |
Note: Parameter estimate (and standard error) given for all variables included in the model. Base values (for dummy variables) are for non-breeding White-backed vultures in the wet season.
Figure 3Standardized vegetation index (based on NDVI values of real vulture points minus NDVI values of background points) by species and season.
Note: Values near zero suggest the distribution of vulture movement is no different than random, while negative values suggest vultures are in relatively dry areas and positive values suggest vultures are in relatively wet areas.