Abstract

In tropical areas, annual rainfall and predation have been reported to drive population dynamics of most species of large herbivores studied so far, with little direct empirical evidence for density-dependent responses of life-history traits. We here investigated in a game ranch in Zimbabwe density-dependent responses of body condition and recruitment in an impala ( Aepyceros melampus (Lichtenstein, 1812)) population that underwent an experimental drastic reduction of density within 2 years under similar rainfall and predation pressure. Body condition of all sex and age classes was lower during the high-density year than during the low-density year, suggesting increased competition for restricted resources at high density. In addition, we observed a significant increase in population recruitment (from 0.47 to 0.80 juveniles/female) as population density declined. Our study provides a rare example of a direct density-dependent response of body condition at the individual level in a tropical ungulate species, and indicates that food resource variation controls population dynamics of impala under constant and moderate predation pressure as is commonly reported in temperate populations of large herbivores.

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