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Trade-offs of predation and foraging explain sexual segregation in African buffalo

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Trade-offs of predation and foraging explain sexual segregation in African buffalo; 2008; Article; Journal; Journal of Animal Ecology; Hay, C. T.; Cross, P. C.; Funston, P. J.

Summary

1. Many studies have investigated why males and females segregate spatially in sexually dimorphic species. These studies have focused primarily on temperate zone ungulates in areas lacking intact predator communities, and few have directly assessed predation rates in different social environments. 2. Data on the movement, social affiliation, mortality and foraging of radio-collared African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) were collected from 2001-06 in the Kruger National Park, South Africa. 3. The vast majority of mortality events were due to lion (Panthera leo) predation, and the mortality hazard associated with being an adult male buffalo in a male-only 'bachelor' group was almost four times higher than for adult females in mixed herds. [...]

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Harvested on Mon Jul 21 14:35:06 MDT 2014 from MODS XML Service

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Type Scheme Key
local-index unknown 70000132
local-pk unknown 70000132
doi http://www.loc.gov/standards/mods/mods-outline-3-5.html#identifier doi:10.1111/j.1365-2656.2008.01409.x
series unknown Journal of Animal Ecology

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citationTypeArticle
journalJournal of Animal Ecology
languageEnglish
parts
typevolume
value77
typeissue
value5

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