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Animals representing a wide range of taxonomic groups are known to select specific food combinations to achieve a nutritionally balanced diet. The nutrient balancing hypothesis suggests that, when given the opportunity, animals select foods to achieve a particular target nutrient balance, and that balancing occurs between meals and between days. For wild ruminants who inhabit landscapes dominated by human land use, nutritionally imbalanced diets can result from ingesting agricultural crops rich in starch and sugar (nonstructural carbohydrates [NCs]), which can be provided to them by people as supplementary feeds. Here, we test the nutrient balancing hypothesis by assessing potential effects that the ingestion of such crops by Alces alces (moose) may have on forage intake. We predicted that moose compensate for an imbalanced intake of excess NC by selecting tree forage with macro-nutritional content better suited for their rumen microbiome during wintertime. We applied DNA metabarcoding to identify plants in fecal and rumen content from the same moose during winter in Sweden. We found that the concentration of NC-rich crops in feces predicted the presence of Picea abies (Norway spruce) in rumen samples. The finding is consistent with the prediction that moose use tree forage as a nutritionally complementary resource to balance their intake of NC-rich foods, and that they ingested P. abies in particular (normally a forage rarely eaten by moose) because it was the most readily available tree. Our finding sheds new light on the foraging behavior of a model species in herbivore ecology, and on how habitat alterations by humans may change the behavior of wildlife.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecy.4377 | DOI Listing |
J Anim Ecol
September 2025
Department of Forest Ecology, Faculty of Forestry and Wood Technology, Mendel University in Brno, Brno, Czech Republic.
Research Highlight: Chen, J., Wang, M. Q.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe architecture of an ant colony's nest entrance modulates the regulation of activity in and out of the nest. This study considers how the architecture of nests of the desert harvester ant facilitates the regulation of foraging activity in an arid environment. Colonies must spend water, in water lost to evaporation when outside the nest, to obtain food and water.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMegaherbivores are typically regarded as agents of top-down control, limiting woody encroachment through destructive foraging. Yet they also possess traits and engage in behaviours that facilitate plant success. For example, megaherbivores can act as effective endozoochorous seed dispersers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
Centre for E-Automation Technologies, School of Electrical Engineering, Vellore Institute of Technology, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India.
Due to urbanization and modern lifestyle, most of women in today's world are prone to Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS), which is a hormonal disorder. Though the symptoms shown by this disease are often uncared, it seriously affects the reproductive health of women. Early detection of PCOS helps in managing several other attributes that are closely related to it.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
August 2025
CNRS LBBE UMR 5558, University of Lyon Villeurbanne France.
We documented the influence of the section of the annual life cycle when crops were not available by tracking space use by two male Barbary macaques that had access to the same cultivated area with cherry and walnut trees, adjacent to an oak forest near Ifrane NP, Morocco. Both individuals remained within a few kilometers of the orchards, even when there was no fruit available. They visited the orchards the most at the beginning of the study when walnuts were available and the herbaceous layer grew, leading to a peak in home range overlap, as predicted by the resource dispersion hypothesis.
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