Publication | Closed Access
Carbon isotopes as indicators of elephant diets and African environments
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Citations
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References
1988
Year
Isotope AnalysisPrehistoric DietsBiogeochemistryAnimal StudyAnimal NutritionMammalogyEvolutionary BiologyIsotope GeochemistryBiochronologyElephant DietsBone CollagenModern Animal DietsEcosystem InteractionAnthropogenic Effect
Summary Stable carbon isotope ratios have been successfully used to assess modern animal diets and to reconstruct prehistoric diets of animals and humans (Vogel & van der Merwe, 1977; van der Merwe & Vogel, 1978; Burleigh & Brothwell, 1978; Vogel, 1978a; DeNiro & Epstein, 1978; Tieszen et al., 1979; Tieszen & Imbamba, 1980; Chisholm, Nelson & Schwarcz, 1982; Tauber, 1981). We have used 13 C/ 12 C ratio measurements of bone collagen to study the diets of African elephants in twelve wildlife refuges. These represent most of the habitats in which elephants live, including such diverse plant communities as primary rain forest, savanna woodland and desert. The δ 13 C values were found to have a simple linear relationship with tree density in most cases. When translated into relative amounts of dietary browse (C 3 plants) and graze (C 4 plants), the grass content is seen to be systematically under‐represented, presumably due to inefficient metabolism. This does not affect the relationship between elephant diet and tree density, which has implications for the study of elephant‐woodland interactions, and for reconstructions of past African environments.
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