Author:
Dawson TJ,McTavish KJ,Ellis BA
Abstract
Eastern grey kangaroos (Macropus giganteus) have expanded into arid areas usually the habitat
of red kangaroos (Macropus rufus). Extra watering sites for domestic stock is the suggested
reason. However, changes in vegetation also have occurred due to grazing from domestic stock.
We investigated the foraging strategies of M. giganteus and M. rufus in arid rangeland to see if
these are involved in the range changes. Foraging patterns were similar, with both species
mostly foraging at night; total feeding times were the same. M. giganteus and M. rufus had
differing diets, though there was considerable overlap of 81 - 87%. Both species were highly
selective, having similar narrow dietary niche breaths. Differences in plant preferences occurred
and though both species had a preference for grass that of M. giganteus was higher. A larger
foregut in M. giganteus reinforces its focus on grass. M. rufus also selected dicot forbs and
malvaceous sub-shrubs. Both kangaroos showed avoidance of abundant chenopod shrubs
(saltbushes and bluebushes) and trees. It is likely that the changes to arid-zone vegetation, with
a shift to grass and annual dicot forbs, has been important for the expansion of M. giganteus,
possibly combined with the greater availability of water.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
20 articles.
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