| Literature DB >> 26380165 |
Ruth V Nichols1, Joris P G M Cromsigt2, Göran Spong3.
Abstract
Large herbivores may affect ecosystem processes and states, but such effects can be difficult to quantify, especially within multispecies assemblages. To better understand such processes and improve our predictive ability of systems undergoing change, herbivore diets can be studied using controlled feeding trials (or cafeteria tests). With some wildlife, such as large herbivores, it is impractical to empirically verify these findings, because it requires visually observing animals in forested environments, which can disturb them from their natural behaviors. Yet, in field-based cafeteria trials it is nearly impossible to differentiate selection between herbivore species that forage on similar plants and make very similar bite marks. However, during browsing ungulates leave saliva residue which includes some buccal cells and DNA that can be extracted for species identification. Here we used a newly developed eDNA-based method (biteDNA) to test the browsing preferences of four sympatric ungulate species in the wild. Overall, food preferences varied between species, but all species strongly preferred deciduous over coniferous species. Our method allows the study of plant-animal interactions in multispecies assemblages at very fine detail.Entities:
Keywords: DNA; Deer; Herbivory; Sweden
Year: 2015 PMID: 26380165 PMCID: PMC4565800 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-015-1285-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Fig. 1Distribution of bites on three tree species. The deer species were identified from saliva and DNA traces found on the browsed bites
Density estimates according to offtake levels and observations by professional hunters (numbers per 1000 hectares) (Svenska Jägareförbundet, pers comm)
| Species | Density |
|---|---|
| Moose | 7 |
| Red deer | 15 |
| Fallow deer | 140 |
| Roe deer | 30 |
| Total | 192 |
Fig. 2Map of the study area with pie charts showing proportions of bites found and identified to the responsible deer species. Green areas on the map indicate areas with relatively higher tree densities. The lighter, tan areas indicate areas either devoid of trees or with relatively lower densities of trees. The blue area is a lake