What limits the Serengeti zebra population?

Sophie Grange, Patrick Duncan, Jean Michel Gaillard, Anthony R.E. Sinclair, Peter J.P. Gogan, Craig Packer, Heribert Hofer, Marion East

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

61 Scopus citations

Abstract

The populations of the ecologically dominant ungulates in the Serengeti ecosystem (zebra, wildebeest and buffalo) have shown markedly different trends since the 1960s: the two ruminants both irrupted after the elimination of rinderpest in 1960, while the zebras have remained stable. The ruminants are resource limited (though parts of the buffalo population have been limited by poaching since the 1980s). The zebras' resource acquisition tactics should allow them to outcompete the ruminants, but their greater spatial dispersion makes them more available to predators, and it has been suggested that this population is limited by predation. To investigate the mechanisms involved in the population dynamics of Serengeti zebra, we compared population dynamics among the three species using demographic models based on age-class-specific survival and fecundity. The only major difference between zebra and the two ruminants occurred in the first-year survival. We show that wildebeest have a higher reproductive potential than zebra (younger age at first breeding and shorter generation time). Nevertheless, these differences in reproduction cannot account for the observed differences in the population trends between the zebra and the ruminants. On the other hand, among-species differences in first-year survival are great enough to account for the constancy of zebra population size. We conclude that the very low first-year survival of zebra limits this population. We provide new data on predation in the Serengeti and show that, as in other ecosystems, predation rates on zebras are high, so predation could hold the population in a "predator pit". However, lion and hyena feed principally on adult zebras, and further work is required to discover the process involved in the high mortality of foals.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)523-532
Number of pages10
JournalOecologia
Volume140
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2004

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Acknowledgements We thank the directors and boards of the Serengeti Wildlife Research Institute and Tanzania National Parks, the park wardens of Serengeti National Park. Without them none of the long-term studies on Serengeti ungulates would have been possible. We thank the many colleagues that have improved the manuscript through their comments on early drafts, particularly N. Owen-Smith, H. Fritz, P. Inchausti, H. Kruuk, H. Klingel and two anonymous referees. This study was supported by the CNRS as part of the France-South Africa Programme International de Coopération Scientifique, Plant-Herbivore Dynamics in Changing Environments.

Keywords

  • African ungulates
  • Bovids
  • Coexistence
  • Equids
  • Population dynamics

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'What limits the Serengeti zebra population?'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this