HIGH HUNTING COSTS MAKE AFRICAN WILD DOGS VULNERABLE TO KLEPTOPARASITISM BY HYAENAS

Citation
Ml. Gorman et al., HIGH HUNTING COSTS MAKE AFRICAN WILD DOGS VULNERABLE TO KLEPTOPARASITISM BY HYAENAS, Nature, 391(6666), 1998, pp. 479-481
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Journal title
NatureACNP
ISSN journal
00280836
Volume
391
Issue
6666
Year of publication
1998
Pages
479 - 481
Database
ISI
SICI code
0028-0836(1998)391:6666<479:HHCMAW>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
The African wild dog Lycaon pictus is critically endangered, with only about 5,000 animals remaining in the wild(1). Across a range of habit ats, there is a negative relationship between the densities of wild do gs and of the spotted hyaena Crocuta crocuta(2). It has been suggested that this is because hyaenas act as 'kleptoparasites' and steal food from dogs. We have now measured the daily energy expenditure of free-r anging dogs to model the impact of kleptoparasitism on energy balance, The daily energy expenditures of six dogs, measured by the doubly lab elled water technique, averaged 15.3 megajoules per day. We estimated that the instantaneous cost of hunting was twenty-five times basal met abolic rate. As hunting is energetically costly, a small loss of food to kleptoparasites has a large impact on the amount of time that dogs must hunt to achieve energy balance. They normally hunt for around 3.5 hours per day but need to increase this to 12 hours if they lose 25% of their food. This would increase their sustained metabolic scope to a physiologically unfeasible twelve times the basal metabolic rate. Th is may explain why there are low populations of wild dogs in regions w here the risk of kleptoparasitism is high.