DIET AND CONDITION OF WILD BOAR, SUS SCROFA SCROFA, WITHOUT SUPPLEMENTARY FEEDING

Citation
Gwtag. Bruinderink et al., DIET AND CONDITION OF WILD BOAR, SUS SCROFA SCROFA, WITHOUT SUPPLEMENTARY FEEDING, Journal of zoology, 233, 1994, pp. 631-648
Citations number
66
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology
Journal title
ISSN journal
09528369
Volume
233
Year of publication
1994
Part
4
Pages
631 - 648
Database
ISI
SICI code
0952-8369(1994)233:<631:DACOWB>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
From 1987 to 1992 diet and condition of two populations of wild boar w hich received no supplementary feeding were studied in the Veluwe area , a large area of heathlands and forests in The Netherlands, and were compared with those obtained in a previous study (1974-1976), when sup plementary food was provided. Composition of stomach contents depended mainly on season, mast availability, and area-specific factors, where as sex and age were of little or no importance. Density dependence was found for the decrease in mast (tree seed) consumption from autumn to winter. In autumn, and in winters of rich mast years, mast was the ma in constituent of the diet. In winters of poor mast years this was rep laced by broadleaved grasses in one area and by broadleaved grasses, w avy hairgrass, and roots in the other. We found no important differenc es between the stomach contents of animals receiving no supplementatio n, and the natural fraction during a period of supplementary feeding. Variation in body weight was related mainly to age and sex, but also t o mast availability. Judged by relative loss of body weight and decrea se of bone marrow fat, juveniles seemed to suffer more from poor mast availability than adults. The decrease in body weight from autumn to w inter was greater when population density was high. In poor mast years , recruitment into the population receiving no supplementation depende d on the availability of broadleaved grasses; in rich years, recruitme nt was still lower than in populations receiving supplementary feeding . In populations receiving supplementary feeding, recruitment seemed i ndependent of mast availability.