Abstract
In 2012–2013, the species composition, aboveground phytomass, and nutrition of freely ranging bison were investigated on a natural steppe pasture of the Western Manych valley. The aboveground mass of plants on the investigated pasture varied from 16.1 to 19.4 c/ha. The composition of the plants consumed by bison and their share in the bison’s diet were determined by microscopy of feces. In the snowless season, graminoids was the basis of the bison’s diet (79–87%). The use of forbs varied from 4.7 to 17.5%. Sedges were present in the forage in summer; they amounted to 6.5–15.4%. The quantitative assessment of the food selectivity was determined using the ratio of the share of a plant species in the diet to its portion in the plant community of the pasture. The most selected were Festuca valesiaca (the selectivity is 12.0), Agropyron sp. sp. (1.7), Polygonum patulum (1.2), and Carex sp. sp. (1.1). In other forage plants (Poa bulbojsa, Tanacetum achileifolium, and other forbs), the selectivity was 0.01–0.3. The nutritional value of fodder vegetation and food indexes (daily intake, digestibility of forage, consumption of metabolizable energy) were estimated. The digestibility was determined by the ratio of inert (undigestible) components (silicon, lignin) in the diet to their amount in the feces. The daily intake of forage was calculated based on the mass of released feces and digestibility of forage. In the snowless season, bison consumed from 6.3–7.0 to 9.2–9.9 kg/ind. (dry weight) per day. The maximum consumption (9.9 kg/ind.) was observed in summer. The digestibility of forage changed from 45 to 53% (the average is 50%). The consumption of metabolizable energy in different seasons varied from 0.60 to 0.91 MJ/kg0.75/day, which corresponded to maintenance energy.
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