Comparison of Fecal, Rumen and Utilization Methods for Ascertaining Pronghorn Diets
- 1 July 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Journal of Range Management
- Vol. 32 (4) , 275-279
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3897830
Abstract
Fourteen male pronghorn (A. americana), 2 in each of 7 spring and summer months, were killed to obtain rumen and fecal matter for comparing methods of determining diets. They came from a herd confined to the Desert Experimental Range in southwestern Utah [USA]. Animals were killed only after they had completed their early morning grazing period. Plant material was removed from the rumens and rectums, fresh feces were collected from the feeding site, and forage utilization and production estimates were made there. Diets as indicated by the 4 data sources.sbd.rumen, intestinal feces, site feces and utilization.sbd.varied with individual animals from close to little agreement, a not unexpected result in view of food availability and selection. Fewer plant species were identified by fecal analysis than were found in the rumen; even fewer species were recorded by utilization estimates. Fecal analysis may be less accurate that rumen data but more so than those based on plant utilization. Validation tests of the fecal method conducted with mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) fed known diets showed substantial differences with individual species in the amounts fed and the amounts indicated by fecal analysis. Only in the case of the single grass species fed was there close aggrement; browse and forb species differed greatly.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- A Comparison of Esophageal Fistula and Fecal Material to Determine Steer DietsJournal of Range Management, 1978