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Latitudinal and seasonal plasticity in American bison Bison bison diets
Author(s) -
Hecker Lee J.,
Coogan Sean C. P.,
Nielsen Scott E.,
Edwards Mark A.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
mammal review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.574
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1365-2907
pISSN - 0305-1838
DOI - 10.1111/mam.12229
Subject(s) - bison bison , ecological niche , niche , biology , ecology , generalist and specialist species , subspecies , habitat
In ecological niche theory, diet is a trait frequently used to place species along a continuum from specialists to generalists. A multidimensional approach to investigating species’ niches has been developed to incorporate nutrition. We apply the concepts of multidimensional nutritional niche theory to the dietary patterns of a widespread, large herbivore, the American bison Bison bison , at various levels of its nutritional niche. Specifically, we sought to estimate dietary niches for female bison at the levels of the forage items they consume and the macronutrients they acquire from those forage items. We assessed how these dietary niches changed seasonally and explored physical and climatic mechanisms that contribute to observed differences in the dietary niches. We also examined dietary differences between the two bison subspecies: wood bison Bison bison athabascae and plains bison Bison bison bison . We compiled data for 16 bison subpopulations using 26 peer‐reviewed publications, government reports, conference proceedings, and graduate theses that described the dietary composition of female bison for analysis of dietary niches. We found that the diets of female bison were, as expected, dominated by graminoids throughout the year, but during the growing season (spring and summer), dietary niches had greater breadth. Their diets were relatively high in carbohydrates, but percentages of dietary lipid and protein increased during the growing season. Further, we found significant increases in consumption of browse items, lipids, and proteins with increasing latitude (†N), and differences between American bison subspecies. Our study provides insight into the fundamental macronutrient niche of the American bison and also provides a framework for the nutritional targets of bison. We show that bison are able to adapt to availability of local forage and that they may consume different items in different proportions in order to regulate nutritional composition of their diet.

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