Food selectivity of large herbivores in Eastern Mongolia


Cite item

Full Text

Open Access Open Access
Restricted Access Access granted
Restricted Access Subscription Access

Abstract

This paper deals with food selectivity in large herbivores of Eastern Mongolia, its factors, and their impact on the herbivore community structure. It is shown that, due to the degradation of vegetation, all studied herbivores display a significant selectivity level conditioned by their morpho–physiological features and spatial distribution. The selectivity seems to provide competitive advantages but no food niche differentiation. We suppose that herbivore communities in Eastern Mongolia, both human-controlled and wild, bear an increase of the small browser portion under pasture degradation. This, in turn, increases the degradation rate. This cyclic interaction shows a possible mechanism for the formation of endogenous crises in herbivore communities and can explain features of extinction events of large herbivores of the “Mammoth fauna.”

About the authors

I. S. Sheremetev

Institute of Biology and Soil Science, Far East Branch

Author for correspondence.
Email: sheremetyev@ibss.dvo.ru
Russian Federation, Vladivostok, 690022

E. A. Petrunenko

Botanical Garden-Institute, Far East Branch

Email: sheremetyev@ibss.dvo.ru
Russian Federation, Vladivostok, 690024

D. E. Kislov

Botanical Garden-Institute, Far East Branch

Email: sheremetyev@ibss.dvo.ru
Russian Federation, Vladivostok, 690024

S. B. Rozenfeld

Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution

Email: sheremetyev@ibss.dvo.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119071

I. A. Dmitriev

Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution

Email: sheremetyev@ibss.dvo.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119071

L. Jargalsaikhan

Institute of General and Experimental Biology

Email: sheremetyev@ibss.dvo.ru
Mongolia, Ulaanbaatar, 190070

S. Enkh-Amgalan

Institute of Geography and Geoecology

Email: sheremetyev@ibss.dvo.ru
Mongolia, Ulaanbaatar, 210620

Supplementary files

Supplementary Files
Action
1. JATS XML

Copyright (c) 2017 Pleiades Publishing, Ltd.