Environmental context shapes the relationship between grass consumption and body size in African herbivore communities

Author:

Abraham Joel O.1ORCID,Rowan John2,O'Brien Kaedan34,Sokolowski Kathryn G.34,Faith J. Tyler345

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Princeton University Princeton New Jersey USA

2. Department of Anthropology University at Albany Albany New York USA

3. Department of Anthropology University of Utah Salt Lake City Utah USA

4. Natural History Museum of Utah University of Utah Salt Lake City Utah USA

5. Origins Centre University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg South Africa

Abstract

AbstractThough herbivore grass dependence has been shown to increase with body size across herbivore species, it is unclear whether this relationship holds at the community level. Here we evaluate whether grass consumption scales positively with body size within African large mammalian herbivore communities and how this relationship varies with environmental context. We used stable carbon isotope and community occurrence data to investigate how grass dependence scales with body size within 23 savanna herbivore communities throughout eastern and central Africa. We found that dietary grass fraction increased with body size for the majority of herbivore communities considered, especially when complete community data were available. However, the slope of this relationship varied, and rainfall seasonality and elephant presence were key drivers of the variation—grass dependence increased less strongly with body size where rainfall was more seasonal and where elephants were present. We found also that the dependence of the herbivore community as a whole on grass peaked at intermediate woody cover. Intraspecific diet variation contributed to these community‐level patterns: common hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius) and giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis) ate less grass where rainfall was more seasonal, whereas Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer) and savanna elephant (Loxodonta africana) grass consumption were parabolically related to woody cover. Our results indicate that general rules appear to govern herbivore community assembly, though some aspects of herbivore foraging behavior depend upon local environmental context.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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