ECOLOGY OF THE ASIAN ELEPHANT IN SOUTHERN INDIA .2. FEEDING-HABITS AND CROP RAIDING PATTERNS

被引:192
作者
SUKUMAR, R
机构
[1] Centre for Ecological Sciences, Indian Institute of Science
关键词
Asian elephant; crop depredation; elephant ecology; Elephas maximus; feeding; foraging strategy; habits; India;
D O I
10.1017/S0266467400004004
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
. The Asian elephant’s foraging strategy in its natural habitat and in cultivation was studied in southern India during 1981–83. Though elephants consumed at least 112 plant species in the study area, about 85% of their diet consisted of only 25 species from the order Malvales and the families Leguminosae, Palmae, Cyperaceae and Gramineae. Alteration between a predominantly browse diet during the dry season with a grass diet during the early wet season was related to the seasonally changing protein content of grasses. Crop raiding, which was sporadic during the dry season, gradually increased with more area being cultivated with the onset of rains. Raiding frequency reached a peak during October-December, with some villages being raided almost every night, when finger millet (Eleusine coracana) was cultivated by most farmers. The monthly frequency of raiding was related to the seasonal movement of elephant herds and to the size of the enclave. Of their total annual food requirement, adult bull elephants derived an estimated 9.3% and family herds 1.7% in quantity from cultivated land. Cultivated cereal and millet crops provided significantly more protein, calcium and sodium than the wild grasses. Ultimately, crop raiding can be thought of as an extension of the elephant’s optimal foraging strategy. © 1990, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:33 / 53
页数:21
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]  
Anderson G.D., Walker B.H., Vegetation composition and elephant damage in the Seng-wa Wildlife Research Area, Rhodesia, Journal of the South African Wildlife Management Association, 4, pp. 1-14, (1974)
[2]  
Bax P.N., Sheldrick D.L.W., Some preliminary observations on the food of elephants in the Tsavo Royal National Park (East) of Kenya, East African Wildlife Journal, 1, pp. 40-53, (1963)
[3]  
Belovsky G.E., Food plant selection by a generalist herbivore: the moose, Ecology, 62, pp. 1020-1030, (1981)
[4]  
Benedlct F.G., The physiology of the elephant., (1936)
[5]  
Blair J.A.S., Boon G.G., Noor N.M., Conservation or cultivation: the confrontation between the Asian elephant and land development in peninsular Malaysia, Land Development Digest, 2, pp. 27-59, (1979)
[6]  
Clemens E.T., Maloiy M.O., The digestive physiology of three East African herbivores: the elephant, rhinoceros and hippopotamus. Journal of Zoology, 198, pp. 141-156, (1982)
[7]  
Conn E.E., Cyanide and cyanogenic glycosides, Herbivores: their interactions with secondary plant metabolites., pp. 387-412, (1979)
[8]  
Dougall H.W., Drysdale V.M., Glover P.E., The chemical composition of Kenya browse and pasture herbage, East African Wildlife Journal, 2, pp. 86-121, (1964)
[9]  
Field C.R., Elephant ecology in the Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda, East African Wildlife Journal, 9, pp. 99-123, (1971)
[10]  
Field C.R., Palatability factors and nutritive values of the food of buffaloes(Synercus caffer) in Uganda, East African Wildlife Journal, 14, pp. 1-15, (1976)