Abstract
2. Examined dung types (from Danish domestic sheep, cattle and horse, and African wild buffalo, white rhino and elephant) contained 76-89% water. Costs of a 20 µm MDIP were often low, since 69-87% of the total nitrogen in bulk dung other than that of elephant and rhino (40-58%) was available to selective feeders.
3. Nitrogen concentrations were high - and C/N ratios low - in most types of bulk dung compared with the average food of terrestrial detritivores or herbivores. Exceptions were elephant and rhino dung with low nitrogen concentrations and high C/N ratios.
4. Estimated C/N ratios of 13-39 in bulk dung (sheep-elephant) were decreased by selective feeding to 7.3-12.6 in the ingested material. In assimilated food, ratios are probably only 5-7, as most assimilable nitrogen and carbon may be of microbial origin. If so, the assimilable food contains a surplus of nitrogen relative to carbon.
5. The primary advantage of selective feeding, particularly in dung with a high C/N ratio, may be to concentrate assimilable carbon in the ingested food. Effects of changing the MDIP within 20-106 µm are modest, especially in dung with a low C/N ratio.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Ecological Entomology |
Volume | 32 |
Pages (from-to) | 1365-2311 |
ISSN | 0307-6946 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2007 |