| Literature DB >> 29322387 |
Mingchun Zhang1, Zhizhong Zhang1, Zhong Li1, Mingsheng Hong2,3, Xiaoping Zhou1, Shiqiang Zhou1, Jindong Zhang2, Vanessa Hull4, Jinyan Huang1, Hemin Zhang5.
Abstract
Diet plays a pivotal role in dictating behavioral patterns of herbivorous animals, particularly specialist species. The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) is well-known as a bamboo specialist. In the present study, the response of giant pandas to spatiotemporal variation of bamboo shoots was explored using field surveys and GPS collar tracking. Results show the dynamics in panda-bamboo space-time relationships that have not been previously articulated. For instance, we found a higher bamboo stump height of foraged bamboo with increasing elevation, places where pandas foraged later in spring when bamboo shoots become more fibrous and woody. The time required for shoots to reach optimum height for foraging was significantly delayed as elevation increased, a pattern which corresponded with panda elevational migration patterns beginning from the lower elevational end of Fargesia robusta distribution and gradually shifting upward until the end of the shooting season. These results indicate that giant pandas can respond to spatiotemporal variation of bamboo resources, such as available shoots. Anthropogenic interference of low-elevation F. robusta habitat should be mitigated, and conservation attention and increased monitoring should be given to F. robusta areas at the low- and mid-elevation ranges, particularly in the spring shooting season.Entities:
Keywords: Fargesia robusta; Foraging patterns; Giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca); Spatiotemporal variation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29322387 PMCID: PMC5854758 DOI: 10.1007/s11356-017-0919-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ISSN: 0944-1344 Impact factor: 4.223
Fig. 1Study area in Wolong National Nature Reserve, China
Summary of GPS-collared pandas (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) in Wolong Nature Reserve, China
| Panda | Age | Sex | Deployment date | Duration of tracking | Tracking months |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zhongzhong | Adult | F | 10 Mar 2011 | 15 Mar 2011–30 Jul 2012 | 17 |
| Meimei | Adult | F | 29 Mar 2010 | 4 Apr 2010–20 Sep2011 | 18 |
| Longlong | Sub-adult | F | 04 Apr 2010 | 10 May 2010–10 Dec 2010; 10 Apr 2011–11 Oct 2011 | 15 |
| Chuanchuan | Adult | M | 31 Mar 2011 | 6 Apr 2011–27 Mar 2012 | 12 |
Fig. 2Fitted curves of the height of F. robusta bamboo shoots across time (a) and elevation (b)
Fig. 3Fitted curves of the basal diameter of F. robusta bamboo shoots over time (a) and elevation (b)
Fig. 4Fitted curves of the height of F. robusta bamboo shoot stumps left behind after panda foraging across time (a) and elevation (b)
Fig. 5Fitted curves of the basal diameter of F. robusta bamboo shoot stumps left behind after panda foraging over time (a) and elevation (b)
Fig. 6Fitted curves of the height of F. robusta bamboo shoots discarded by giant pandas over time (a) and elevation (b)
Fig. 7Linear estimation of the relationship between the time since the start of the growing season and the elevation of F. robusta bamboo shoot feeding sites used by giant pandas
Fig. 8Availability of F. robusta shoots for giant pandas with increasing elevation. T1, T2 and T3 were the times at which F. robusta shoots reached 10, 30, and 200 cm in height, respectively (days since the start of the growing season). The shaded area from T2 to T3 was defined as the time during which F. robusta shoots were available for giant panda foraging
Fig. 9Elevational movement patterns of GPS-collared giant pandas across the year (a) and during the F. robusta bamboo shooting season (April–June) (b)