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10 - Animal foraging and food

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2009

W. Richard J. Dean
Affiliation:
University of Cape Town
Suzanne Milton
Affiliation:
University of Cape Town
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Summary

Introduction

Resources in the karoo, desert, and the arid savanna are generally patchy in time and space, lacking the seasonality typical of more mesic winter and summer rainfall biomes. The southern and western parts of the karoo are poor in species and abundance of grasses (Acocks, 1953; Gibbs Russell et al., 1990), and lack the large grazing herbivores of the grasslands and mesic savannas (Skead, 1980, 1987) or granivorous rodents characteristic of northernhemisphere arid systems (Abramsky, 1983; Kerley, 1991). Plants bearing juicy fruits are spatially restricted (mainly to drainage lines), so this resource is only available to animals of these habitats, or animals able to move economically between drainage lines (Acocks, 1976). Seeds are abundant but patchy, so granivores must either move between patches, as the granivorous birds do, or store seeds during a time of plenty, as the ants do. Small mammals are not abundant (Kerley, 1992a) and, in general, carnivores tend to take a wider range of prey sizes and species in the karoo than they do elsewhere (Palmer and Fairall, 1988; Boshoff et al., 1990). Even such species as black eagle Aquila verreauxii, thought to be relatively stenophagous, take a wide range of prey species (Boshoff et al., 1991). Below-ground, however, there is an abundance of food, and, for those animals that are fossorial, or are able to dig into hard soils, there are rich rewards in the form of underground plant parts as well as invertebrate and vertebrate prey.

Food resources for animals in the karoo can be classified along an availability (or predictability) gradient as dependable, seasonal or unpredictably scattered in time and space.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Karoo
Ecological Patterns and Processes
, pp. 164 - 178
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1999

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