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Habitat, space use and feeding ecology of the African buffalo

Taylor Russell, Bennitt Emily, Fynn Richard W.S., Korte Lisa, Naidoo R., Roug A., Cornélis Daniel. 2023. Habitat, space use and feeding ecology of the African buffalo. In : Ecology and management of the African buffalo. Caron Alexandre (ed.), Cornélis Daniel (ed.), Chardonnet Philippe (ed.), Prins Herbert H.T. (ed.). Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 133-152. (Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation) ISBN 978-1-316-51874-8

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Résumé : African buffalo herd size varies across their distribution range from as few as 5–10 in the rainforests of West and Central Africa to as many as 2000 individuals in the floodplains of eastern and southern Africa. The home range size of African buffalo also varies greatly, with those of savanna buffalo herds generally ranging between 50 and 350 km2. The larger home ranges are generally observed in areas where resources are spatially segregated, and where herds are forced to undertake seasonal movements. In contrast, forest buffalo exhibit smaller home ranges (<10 km2) due to a less pronounced seasonality of the environment, and a more homogeneous spatial arrangement of resources. African buffalo are ruminants, essentially feeding on grass and roughage. This species is capable of subsisting on pastures too coarse and too tall for most other herbivores. The African buffalo occupies an important niche, opening up habitats that are preferred by short-grass grazers. Although the African buffalo primarily is a grazer, savanna buffalo can partially switch their diet to browse when grasses become tall and lignified. The ability of the African buffalo to cope with contrasting environmental conditions throughout most sub-Saharan ecosystems, by modulating a large array of biological traits, highlights a high degree of behavioural plasticity.

Mots-clés libres : Buffalo, Coexistence, Africa, Cultural ecosystem services, Cultural keystone species

Agences de financement hors UE : Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement, Fondation François Sommer

Auteurs et affiliations

  • Taylor Russell, WWF (ZWE)
  • Bennitt Emily, University of Botswana (BWA)
  • Fynn Richard W.S., Okavango Research Institute (BWA)
  • Korte Lisa, US Fish and Wildlife Service (USA)
  • Naidoo R., WWF (USA)
  • Roug A., University of Pretoria (ZAF)
  • Cornélis Daniel, CIRAD-ES-UPR Forêts et sociétés (FRA)

Autres liens de la publication

Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/607158/)

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