Differences in Faecal Nutritional Components in Three Species of Saharan Gazelles on Standard Diets in Relation to Species, Age and Sex

Author:

Čupić Stipan1ORCID,Cassinello Jorge2,Kušta Tomáš1,Ceacero Francisco3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Game Management and Wildlife Biology, Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences, 16500 Prague, Czech Republic

2. Experimental Station of Arid Zones, Spanish National Research Council (EEZA-CSIC), 04120 Almeria, Spain

3. Department of Animal Science and Food Processing, Faculty of Tropical AgriSciences, Czech University of Life Sciences, 16500 Prague, Czech Republic

Abstract

Various environmental, individual, and species-specific factors may affect digestive efficiency in wild ruminants. The study of faecal nutritional components is a commonly used technique to understand these effects, assuming that faecal nitrogen and fibre contents reflect the diet’s nutritional quality and digestibility. Recent studies have highlighted the relatively high influence of factors like sex, age, weight or body condition on digestive efficiency. This manuscript is focused on the inter-specific variability in faecal nutritional components under the same feeding regime, using three captive populations of closely related gazelles as model species. Faecal samples from 193 individuals were analysed through Near InfraRed Spectroscopy. Species, sex and age influence on faecal nitrogen and fibres (ADF and NDF) were investigated. We found inter-specific differences in the faecal content of the three studied nutritional components. Cuvier’s gazelle showed lower faecal nitrogen content, suggesting lower digestive efficiency than dorcas and dama gazelles. Sex and age also had a moderate effect, especially in faecal nitrogen, but these effects were not constant across the three studied species. On the contrary, faecal fibres were highly constant (i.e., dependent on diet quality). These results confirm that individual factors affecting faecal nutritional components are also species-specific.

Funder

Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences

Faculty of Tropical AgriSciences

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

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