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Food shortage appears to be the chief natural factor limiting the numbers of many birds, of various carnivorous and herbivorous mammals, of many larger marine fish, and of certain predatory insects D. Lack Food, Water, & Nutrition • What are the relationships between nutrition and wildlife populations? • What are food components and how does understanding them help us as a wildlife biologist? Food, Water, & Nutrition • What is the differences between food use, food digestibility, food availability, & food selection; what affects these thing’s, and how can I use this information to manage wildlife? • How do wildlife get water, and how much water do wildlife need? • Who cares? Food, Water, & Nutrition • Nutrition affects condition, mortality, & reproduction – Population Dynamics (i.e., N) • Food & water = Welfare or Decimating Factors? Food, Water, & Nutrition • White-tailed deer (New York; Verme 1965) High Nutrition Does examined 27 Does not bred 0 Fawns produced 47 Litters (1:2:3 fawns) 2:21:1 Fawns per doe 1.74 % male fawns 36 • Florida? Low Nutrition 22 2 21 17:2:0 0.95 69 Food, Water, & Nutrition Compared to birds eating a “normal” diet (%) Species Northern Bobwhite Scaled Quail Diet Body mass Ovary mass Egg production Egg mass Low E 0.81 0.25 0.12 0.99 Low P 0.89 0.73 0.71 0.94 Low E & P 0.80 0.17 0.10 0.97 Low E 0.99 0.42 0.26 0.96 Low P 1.00 1.00 1.00 0.99 Low E & P 0.85 0.21 0.30 1.00 Giuliano et al. (1996) Jeff Vanuga, USDA NRCS Food, Water, & Nutrition • Food Components – Energy – Proteins – Carbohydrates – Fats – Minerals (Nutrients) – Vitamins – Water 100 14 Homeotherms – Season – Activity – Size matters – Species BMR (Kcal/day) • Energy 12 10 8 50 6 4 2 0 0 0 0.5 – Thermal neutral zone – Homeotherms v. poikilotherms – Endotherm v. ectotherm 1 Body Mass (Kg) 1.5 Rel. BMR (Kcal/day/100 g body mass) Food, Water, & Nutrition Food, Water, & Nutrition • Energy – Content (gross): Fats > Proteins > Carbohydrates – Utilization: Carbohydrates > Fats > Proteins – Food v. stored • Mammals > birds > herps Food, Water, & Nutrition • Energy (W.W. Mautz/Wildlife Management Institute 1978) Food, Water, & Nutrition • Energy Gross Energy Digestible Energy Energy Lost in Feces Metabolizable Energy Energy Lost in Urine and Methane – Species-specific Net Energy Energy Lost In Work of Digestion Food, Water, & Nutrition • Carbohydrates – 3.9-4.2 kcal/g – Cellulose, starches, sugars – Plants* – Availability/digestibility Food, Water, & Nutrition • Fats (and oils) – 9.5 kcal/g – Meat and some seeds – Availability/digestibility Food, Water, & Nutrition • Protein – 5.7 kcal/g – Amino acids* – Meat and legumes – Availability/digestibility Food, Water, & Nutrition • Minerals (Nutrients) – Micro v. macro • 0.01% of body mass – Licks Food, Water, & Nutrition • Vitamins – Essential in small amounts – Coprophagy Food, Water, & Nutrition • Proper nutrition – Diverse diet – Carnivore v. herbivore • • • • Energy Other components Parts of foods not the same Selectivity • Protein & vitamin issues for herbivores Food, Water, & Nutrition Food Energy (Kcal/100 g) Protein (%) Fat (%) Carbo’s (%) Grass 220 13 6 73 Jack pine needles 524 9 12 77 White cedar twigs & leaves 237 3 4 91 Snails 219 52 1 0 Crabs 170 33 2 9 Insects 374 56 4 24 Fish 426 76 4 0 Bird eggs 430 38 31 0 Birds 446 57 24 0 448 89 10 0 (From Bolen & Robinson 2003) Mammals Bolen, Eric G.; Robinson, William, Wildlife Ecology and Management, 5 th Edition, ©2003. Electronically reproduced by permission of Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. Food, Water, & Nutrition • Diet – Species – Sex – Age – Season – Year Food, Water, & Nutrition • Understanding wildlife nutrition – Food use – Food digestibility – Food availability – Food selection* Food, Water, & Nutrition • Food use – Carnivores v. herbivores – Feeding rates • Predation & foraging behavior – Bobwhite & supplemental feeding example – Large carnivores in Africa example (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) Food, Water, & Nutrition • Food use – Quality v. quantity • Species – Herbivore v. carnivore • Season – e.g., Spring or after fire green-up • Part of organism – e.g., seed v. stem Food, Water, & Nutrition Food Energy (Kcal/100 g) Protein (%) Fat (%) Carbo’s (%) Grass 220 13 6 73 Jack pine needles 524 9 12 77 White cedar twigs & leaves 237 3 4 91 Snails 219 52 1 0 Crabs 170 33 2 9 Insects 374 56 4 24 Fish 426 76 4 0 Bird eggs 430 38 31 0 Birds 446 57 24 0 448 89 10 0 (From Bolen & Robinson 2003) Mammals Bolen, Eric G.; Robinson, William, Wildlife Ecology and Management, 5 th Edition, ©2003. Electronically reproduced by permission of Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. Food, Water, & Nutrition • Food use – Habitat effects • Especially herbivores –K Food, Water, & Nutrition • Food digestibility Bird Mammals & Herps Ruminant Mammal Mouth Esophagus Stomach Crop Rumen Esophagus Small Intestine Proventriculus Gizzard Cecum Intestine Ceca Large Intestine Rumen Reticulum Cloaca Rectum Abomasum Omasum Vent Anus – GI tract length & passage rates important – Artificial feeding problems Food, Water, & Nutrition • Food (& components) availability – Quantity – Accessibility – Digestibility • Plant defenses • Hard animal parts (W.W. Mautz/Wildlife Management Institute 1978) – Effects on movements & distribution • Native • Food plots • Supplemental feeding Food, Water, & Nutrition • Food selection – Use relative to availability Food % use % available Selection A 60 80 - B 10 10 0 C 30 5 + D 0 5 - – A limiting factor/link Food, Water, & Nutrition • Jaguar feeding ecology: the distribution of predator & prey through time & space – A case study Food, Water, & Nutrition • Water – Digestion, metabolism, excretion, & cooling – Cover USDA Photo: Tim McCabe Food, Water, & Nutrition • Water – Sources • Free water – Ponds, puddles, dew, etc. • Foods – Seeds: 2-3% – Animal tissue & succulent plants: up to 70% • Metabolism (metabolic water) – Fats: 1.07 ml/g – Proteins: 0.40 ml/g – Carbohydrates: 0.56 ml/g Food, Water, & Nutrition • Water – Size, sex, age, & season – Adaptations – Effects on distribution USDA Photo: Tim McCabe Sliding down a brushy hillside Food, Water, & Nutrition • Effects on condition – Survival & repro. •N – Limiting season • Prior seasons – Reserves – Too fat? (W.W. Mautz/Wildlife Management Institute 1978) Food, Water, & Nutrition • Habitat management – Habitat components in relation to conditions • Food, cover, water, & space • So what! Cover is a magic word in wildlife management. It is, indeed, often a magic wand with which wild animals and birds are made to populate places formerly uninhabitable. …It seems desirable that we should seek to analyze the complex nature of cover more carefully. C. Elton Cover • • • • • • What is cover? What types of cover are there? What factors affect cover selection? How do wildlife use cover differently? What factors affect cover quality & availability? Who cares? Cover • Cover v. habitat • Covert • Any structural resource of the environment that enhances reproduction and/or survival of wildlife by providing for any of the natural functions of the species (Bailey 1984) – A place • Cover = Welfare or Decimating Factor? Cover • Shelter for wildlife that consists of vegetation and topographic features that provide places to feed, hide, sleep, play, and raise young (Leopold 1933) – Artificial structures Chris Schnepf, University of Idaho, www.forestryimages.org Cover • Recognizing wildlife adaptations to cover (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) • Management (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) Cover • Multi-dimensional & 360◦ – Movements, shelter, & visibility Cover • Types & functions of cover – Shelter & concealment • • • • • • • • • • • Winter Refuge Loafing/resting Nesting Breeding Roasting Thermal Escape Bedding/roosting Feeding Traveling ← Leopold’s “Special Factors” img5.travelblog.org (NOAA Photo) Cover • Ecological traps Chris Schnepf, University of Idaho Cover (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) Cover • Generalists v. specialists (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) Cover • Vegetation: structure v. species (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) Cover Scott Bauer, USDA ARS Chris Schnepf, University of Idaho • Deer yards – Limiting type – Snow, wind, & temperature – Food David Shorthouse, University of Alberta – Limiting factor/link – The brushy hillside Paul Bolstad, University of Minnesota Cover • What affects cover requirements? – Species – Function – Season – Age – Predation pressure – Pests – Weather – Region Chris Schnepf, University of Idaho Paul Bolstad, University of Minnesota Cover • Selection v. use v. availability • Availability & management – Land-use – Succession • So what!