Abstract

Seasonal fluctuations in water availability cause predictable changes in the profitability of habitats in tropical ecosystems, and animals evolve adaptive behavioural and spatial responses to these fluctuations. However, stochastic changes in the distribution and abundance of surface water between years can alter resource availability at a landscape scale, causing shifts in animal behaviour. In the Okavango Delta, Botswana, a flood-pulsed ecosystem, the volume of water entering the system doubled between 2008 and 2009, creating a sudden change in the landscape. We used African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) to test the hypotheses that seasonal habitat selection would be related to water availability, that increased floodwater levels would decrease forage abundance and affect habitat selection, and that this would decrease buffalo resting time, reduce reproductive success and decrease body condition. Buffalo selected contrasting seasonal habitats, using habitats far from permanent water during the rainy season and seasonally-flooded habitats close to permanent water during the early and late flood seasons. The 2009 water increase reduced forage availability in seasonally-flooded habitats, removing a resource buffer used by the buffalo during the late flood season, when resources were most limited. In response, buffalo used drier habitats in 2009, although there was no significant change in the time spent moving or resting, or daily distance moved. While their reproductive success decreased in 2009, body condition increased. A protracted period of high water levels could prove detrimental to herbivores, especially to smaller-bodied species that require high quality forage. Stochastic annual fluctuations in water levels, predicted to increase as a result of anthropogenically-induced climate change, are likely to have substantial impacts on the functioning of water-driven tropical ecosystems, affecting environmental conditions within protected areas. Buffer zones around critical seasonal resources are essential to allow animals to engage in compensatory behavioural and spatial mechanisms in response to changing environmental conditions.

Highlights

  • Temperate ecosystems are driven by changes in temperature, whereas tropical ones are governed by fluctuations in water availability [1]

  • Water availability interacts with soil type and nutrient content to affect vegetation growth, and so the distribution of particular habitat types at a landscape scale is related to their proximity to permanent water sources [9]

  • Seasonal Habitat Selection Seasonal Urochloa trichopus distribution (UD) were produced for each collared buffalo, giving

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Summary

Introduction

Temperate ecosystems are driven by changes in temperature, whereas tropical ones are governed by fluctuations in water availability [1]. Seasonal rainfall in tropical regions influences the spatial distribution of herbivores by causing temporal variation in the availability of water and the productivity of particular habitats [2]. Water availability places spatial constraints on herbivores during the dry season by forcing them to occupy habitats close to permanent water sources [3], some species engage in long-distance central-place foraging, regularly moving between permanent water sources and foraging grounds several kilometres away [4]. Differences in soil type and nutrient concentration contribute to variation in the nutrient content [6] and growth rates of seasonal grasses, resulting in habitat types of disparate value [7]. Water availability interacts with soil type and nutrient content to affect vegetation growth, and so the distribution of particular habitat types at a landscape scale is related to their proximity to permanent water sources [9]. Seasonal shifts in habitat selection often result in geographically distinct seasonal ranges, and can lead to long-distance migrations [11]

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