- Title
- The jackal as a mesopredator : dietary response to an apex predator and role as an endozoochore
- Creator
- Favaretto, Bianca Sashika
- Subject
- Jackal buzzard
- Date Issued
- 2020
- Date
- 2020
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- MSc
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10948/48313
- Identifier
- vital:40841
- Description
- Interactions between apex predators, mesopredators and their impacts on trophic dynamics have been well documented. However, the influence of apex predators, through the provision of carrion, on the foraging ecology of African mesopredators is poorly understood. To investigate such resource supplementation by apex predators for mesopredators, the black-backed jackal Canis mesomelas, a generalist mesopredator, was used as a model species to improve our understanding of this topic in South African ecosystems. To do this, I compared the diet of jackal at replicated sites with and without cheetah in the eastern Karoo, South Africa. Scat samples were macroscopically categorized into six broad dietary categories: mammal, reptile, bird, fruit, forage and insect. Mammalian prey was further identified to species and grouped into six functional dietary categories: carnivore, large ungulate, small ungulate, small mammal, and unknown mammal. Jackal diets were dominated by mammal prey, with significant differences in the biomass and frequency of occurrence of mammals by jackal at sites with cheetah and without cheetah. Mammal consumption, showed limited variation amongst seasons. Resource supplementation provided by predator derived carrion is an important factor influencing jackal foraging ecology. The emergent hypothesis that jackal may show demographic responses (increased fecundity, survival, density) to this supplementation needs to be tested. This study also provided an opportunity to investigate the potential role of jackal as an endozoochore. Jackal consume fruits and their seeds, yet to our knowledge, an investigation into their seed dispersing abilities is yet to be investigated. This study assessed the viability and germination capacity of ingested seeds extracted from jackal scat samples using the tetrazolium tests and germination trials. Seed viability and germination of all three species (Grewia occidentalis, Pappea capensis and Diospyros lycioides) were significantly lower than uningested seeds. These results suggest that jackal gut passage is acting severely on ingested seeds. This study represents a novel investigation into differences in jackal diet in sites with and without cheetah as well as the role jackal play in endozoochory, contributing to improved understanding of the ecological role of jackal.
- Format
- iv, 106 leaves
- Format
- Publisher
- Nelson Mandela University
- Publisher
- Faculty of Science
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Nelson Mandela University
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View Details Download | SOURCE1 | Favaretto, BS 214063631 Dissertation April 2020.pdf | 2 MB | Adobe Acrobat PDF | View Details Download |