C. Carbone et al., FEEDING SUCCESS IN AFRICAN WILD DOGS - DOES KLEPTOPARASITISM BY SPOTTED HYENAS INFLUENCE HUNTING GROUP-SIZE, Journal of Animal Ecology, 66(3), 1997, pp. 318-326
1. Group hunting in social carnivores is generally thought to have evo
lved through natural selection for improved efficiency of prey capture
, increased prey size apprehended or defence of the kill against intra
- and interspecific kleptoparasitism. 2. We used a simple model to exp
lore how variation in hunting group size or wild dogs in the Serengeti
influences defence of kills against kleptoparasitism from spotted hye
nas and the trade-off effects this has on intake rate per dog for a gi
ven prey size selected. 3. The analysis presented suggests that while
kleptoparasitism substantially influences the amount of time a hunting
group can access a kill, increases in access rime with increased hunt
ing group size rarely fully compensate Cor the reduction in each dog's
share of the carcass due to scramble competition among the dogs. 4. A
profitability index, which includes limitations of the probability of
capturing different sized prey, gut capacity, food depletion and acce
ss time, suggests that small hunting groups (1-2) would be particularl
y vulnerable to kleptoparasitism because they are usable to fully sati
ate themselves before spotted hyenas take over their kills. Intermedia
te-sized hunting groups may be most effective at meeting nutritional d
emands over a range of prey sizes. 5. While reasons for the recent ext
inction of the Serengeti wild dog population remain speculative, this
paper contributes lo the debate by proposing that kleptoparasitism by
spotted hyenas would have placed a major constraint on the ability of
individual wild dog packs to recover from episodic disasters.