Search

Habitat selection for calving by ungulates (saiga antelope) is an important behavioral trait because it affects neonate survival. Generally, ungulate calving site selection varies by vulnerability to predators, local topography, habitat quality and level of human disturbance.
Factors that affect group sizes in large ungulates are generally poorly understood for species from remote regions. Understanding grouping patterns is important for effective species management, but is lacking for the endangered Mongolian saiga (Saiga tatarica mongolica).
We used time series data, ecological snapshots of the biomass of native and domestic ungulates, and ecologically and behaviourally based fieldwork to test our hypothesis. In Mongolia increases in domestic goat production were associated with a three-fold increase in local profits for herders co-existing with endangered saiga (Saiga tatarica).
Factors affecting juvenile survival are poorly known in the world's most northern antelope, the endangered saiga (Saiga tatarica), yet these factors are fundamental for understanding what drives population change.
Here we describe capture protocols for adult females handled quickly and without anaesthesia. Using multiple vehicles driven at high speed, individual saiga were isolated from groups and herded into nets.
We report findings from the first survey for Mongolian saiga to utilize statistically rigorous methodology, using line transect distance sampling in 2006 and 2007 to obtain population estimates in and around the Sharga Nature Reserve, the southern part of the species current range.
Saiga have faced the long term threat of climate change and now the more immediate danger of human persecution and habitat degradation. In less than two decades, numbers have dropped 95% from 1,000,000 to 50,000.
The current but untested hypothesis is that a combination of unusual weather, topography and pasture improvement resulted in fast-growing, moist and atypically composed forage, which caused a form of metabolite toxicosis. An analysis of assumptions underlying this hypothesis using meteorological data and satellite imagery revealed that neither temporal variation in weather nor highly-productive, moist forage are likely to have been factors in the die-offs; although significantly lower vegetation or soil moisture in die-off zones than in the surrounding landscape indicates events were location-dependent, and therefore precipitated by changes in calving site selection driven by human…