Abstract
The diets of Zyzomys woodwardi from two habitat types and Z, argurus from one of them were
investigated by microanalysis of faecal samples which were collected over a 12-month period.
Forty-three species of food plants were identified. Differences were found in the diets of Z. woodwardi
from the two habitat types, according to the different food plants available; the two species living
sympatrically shared 52% of plant species identified. Both species ate a wide range of seed sizes,
according to what was available seasonally. Hard-shelled seeds remained on the ground as a ready food
store for much of the year but grasses were utilized only in the dry season, as they rotted or germinated
during the wet. The technique used produced fragments that were identifiable, when the reference
collection was sufficiently extensive, but was not suitable for detailed quantitative comparisons and was
extremely time-consuming.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
6 articles.
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