About: Ungulate is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 919 publications have been published within this topic receiving 38568 citations. The topic is also known as: Ungulata.
TL;DR: The dynamics of the Serengeti Ecosystem: Process and Pattern A R E Sinclair as mentioned in this paper, A R. N Norton-Griffiths, M V Bertram, A. E Sinclair, and A. R. Sinclair have discussed the role of the wild animals in the evolution and evolution of the ecosystem.
Abstract: Preface Acknowledgments 1: Dynamics of the Serengeti Ecosystem: Process and Pattern A R E Sinclair 2: The Serengeti Environment A R E Sinclair 3: Grassland-Herbivore Dynamics S J McNaughton 4: The Eruption of the Ruminants A R E Sinclair 5: The "Migration" and Grazing Succession Linda Maddock 6: Feeding Strategy and the Pattern of Resource-Partitioning in Ungulates P J Jarman, A R E Sinclair 7: Energy Costs of Locomotion and the Concept of "Foraging Radius" C J Pennycuick 8: The Dynamics of Ungulate Social Organization P J Jarman, M V Jarman 9: Serengeti Predators and Their Social Systems Brian C R Bertram 10: Population Changes in Lions and Other Predators J P Hanby, J D Bygott 11: The Adaptations of Scavengers D C Houston 12: A Simulation of the Wildebeest Population, Other Ungulates, and Their Predators Ray Hilborn, A R E Sinclair 13: The Influence of Grazing, Browsing, and Fire on the Vegetation Dynamics of the Serengeti M Norton-Griffiths Appendix A: Changes in Populations of Resident Ungulates J J R Grimsdelt Appendix B: Scientific and Common Names of Serengeti Mammal and Bird Species Mentioned in the Text Appendix C: Bibliography of Serengeti Scientific Publications Index
TL;DR: Differences among ecosystems in the role played by ungulate herbivory result from the relative strength of these factors enhancing plant tolerance to herbvory and limiting foraging selectivity, a review of studies of ungulates' effects on plant community composition indicates.
Abstract: Large mammalian herbivores not only depend on plant communities for their existence but cause major changes in plant community composition and structure, These changes have direct consequences for ecosystem processes, but recent studies of ungulate-ecosystem relations show widely divergent ungulate effects in different ecosystems. We reviewed studies of ungulate effects on plant community composition to gain insight into potential mechanisms of ungulate-induced changes in both community composition and ecosystem processes. Our analysis of these studies is based on the premise that the effect ungulates exert on plant communities depends on the balance between (1) feeding selectivity of herbivores (i.e., degree to which different plant species or ecotypes experience different levels of tissue loss), and (2) differences among plant species in their ability to recover from tissue loss. A large number of studies clearly show that selective ungulate herbivory leads to the dominance of unpalatable, chemically defended plant species in communities. However, many studies have also demonstrated that intensive long-term herbivory does not lead to the invasion of unpalatable species into the community, and can even increase the dominance of highly palatable species. Our review indicates that high levels of nutrient inputs or recycling and an intermittent temporal pattern of herbivory (often due to migration) are key factors increasing the regrowth capacity of palatable species and hence maintaining their dominance in plant communities supporting abundant herbivores. Key factors limiting ungulate foraging selectivity, again limiting herbivore-induced dominance of slow-growing, unpalatable species, include herding behavior, early growing season and postfire herbivory, asynchronous phenology of palatable versus unpalatable species, and low relative abundance of unpalatable species. Our review indicates differences among ecosystems in the role played by ungulate herbivory result from the relative strength of these factors enhancing plant tolerance to herbivory and limiting foraging selectivity. Anthropogenic changes in these factors (e.g., alteration of migration patterns) therefore have the potential to significantly alter the effects of ungulates on plant communities and ecosystem processes.
TL;DR: In the mixed conifer‐hardwood forests around the Great Lakes in North America, widespread habitat modification and the extirpation of native predators and other ungulates have acted to boost populations of white-tailed deer to historically high densities, as evidenced by demographic analysis.
TL;DR: Biodiversity allows both predation (top-down) and resource limitation (bottom-up) to act simultaneously to affect herbivore populations.
Abstract: There are many cases where animal populations are affected by predators and resources in terrestrial ecosystems1,2,3, but the factors that determine when one or the other predominates remain poorly understood4,5. Here we show, using 40 years of data from the highly diverse mammal community of the Serengeti ecosystem, East Africa, that the primary cause of mortality for adults of a particular species is determined by two factors—the species diversity of both the predators and prey and the body size of that prey species relative to other prey and predators. Small ungulates in Serengeti are exposed to more predators, owing to opportunistic predation, than are larger ungulates; they also suffer greater predation rates, and experience strong predation pressure. A threshold occurs at prey body sizes of ∼150 kg, above which ungulate species have few natural predators and exhibit food limitation. Thus, biodiversity allows both predation (top-down) and resource limitation (bottom-up) to act simultaneously to affect herbivore populations. This result may apply generally in systems where there is a diversity of predators and prey.
TL;DR: A new and greatly simplified methodology for the assessment of the dietary adaptations of living and fossil taxa has been developed which allows for microwear scar topography to be accurately analyzed at low magnification (35×) using a standard stereomicroscope, which provides finer subdivisions within the basic dietary categories.
Abstract: A new and greatly simplified methodology for the assessment of the dietary adaptations of living and fossil taxa has been developed which allows for microwear scar topography to be accurately analyzed at low magnification (353) using a standard stereomicroscope. In addition to the traditional scratch and pit numbers, we introduce four qualitative variables: scratch texture, cross scratches, large pits, and gouges, which provide finer subdivisions within the basic dietary categories. A large extant comparative ungulate microwear database (809 individuals; 50 species) is presented and interpreted to elucidate the diets of extant ungulates. We distinguish three major trophic phases in extant ungulates: traditional browsers and grazers, two phases represented by only a few species, and a browsing-grazing transitional phase where most species fall, including all mixed feeders. There are two types of mixed feeders: seasonal or regional mixed feeders and meal-by-meal mixed feeders. Some species have results that separate them from traditional members of their trophic group; i.e., browsers, grazers, and mixed feeders. Duikers are unique in spanning almost the entire dietary spectrum. Okapia, Tapirus, Tragulus, and Moschus species have wear similar to duikers. Proboscideans fall in the browsing-grazing transitional phase, as do the two suids studied. The latter differ from each other by their degree of rooting. Archaic fossil equids spanning the supposed browsing-grazing transition were compared to extant ungulates. Two major clusters are discerned: (1) Hyracotherium has microwear most similar to that of the duiker Cephalopus silvicultor and was a fruit/seed eating browser. (2)