AI Article Synopsis

  • The nutritional state of northern ungulates, like muskoxen, is influenced by their environment and directly affects reproductive rates, such as pregnancy.
  • Through analyzing nitrogen stable isotopes in muskox guard hairs from Greenland over approximately 2.5 years, researchers reconstructed their dietary history, showing seasonal dietary patterns tied to environmental factors like temperature and snow depth.
  • The study suggests that winter dietary conditions could serve as indicators for calf production in the spring and highlights the potential for using stable isotope analysis as a monitoring tool for wildlife in remote Arctic regions.

Article Abstract

The nutritional state of animals is tightly linked to the ambient environment, and for northern ungulates the state strongly influences vital population demographics, such as pregnancy rates. Continuously growing tissues, such as hair, can be viewed as dietary records of animals over longer temporal scales. Using sequential data on nitrogen stable isotopes (δ15N) in muskox guard hairs from ten individuals in high arctic Northeast Greenland, we were able to reconstruct the dietary history of muskoxen over approximately 2.5 years with a high temporal resolution of app. 9 days. The dietary chronology included almost three full summer and winter periods. The diet showed strong intra- and inter-annual seasonality, and was significantly linked to changes in local environmental conditions (temperature and snow depth). The summer diets were highly similar across years, reflecting a graminoid-dominated diet. In contrast, winter diets were markedly different between years, a pattern apparently linked to snow conditions. Snow-rich winters had markedly higher δ15N values than snow-poor winters, indicating that muskoxen had limited access to forage, and relied more heavily on their body stores. Due to the close link between body stores and calf production in northern ungulates, the dietary winter signals could eventually serve as an indicator of calf production the following spring. Our study opens the field for further studies and longer chronologies to test such links. The method of sequential stable isotope analysis of guard hairs thus constitutes a promising candidate for population-level monitoring of animals in remote, arctic areas.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4838213PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0152874PLOS

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