According to Carbone,
Du Toit, and Gordon (1997), the Wild dog population has nearly vanished from
the Serengeti plains. During the same period in the Serengeti, the hyena
population has more than doubled, which is thought to be due to a substantial
increase in the wildebeest and gazelle populations. The shift in population
density of these two species has resulted in a significant increase in the
ratio of hyenas to wild dogs in the Serengeti. Given that wild dogs are
substantially smaller than hyenas, they can be driven off fresh kills by
relatively few hyenas. This has been documented in a number of studies (see
Eaton 1979; Fanshawe & Fitz Gibbon, 1993; Creel & Creel, 1996) which
found a negative relationship between wild dog and hyena densities across six
ecosystems.
A simple model was developed to
explore how variation in wild dog hunting group size in the Serengeti
influences defense of kills against hyenas, and the trade-off effects this has
on intake rate per dog for a given prey size. The article's primary focus is upon
the question of whether increased access time at a kill (afforded by group
defense against hyenas) compensates for the reduction in each dog's potential
share of the carcass and, hence, whether adjustment of hunting group size is a
strategy that wild dogs can employ against kleptoparasitism. Of secondary interest is the articles
examination of the impact of kleptoparasitism on average profitability of
different prey with varying hunting group sizes.
The authors found that while kleptoparasitism
substantially influences the amount of time a hunting group can access a kill,
increases in access time with increased hunting group size rarely fully
compensate for the reduction in each dog's share of the carcass due to
‘scramble competition’ among the dogs. This was displayed in a profitability
index, which included limitations of the probability of capturing different
sized prey, gut capacity, food depletion and access time, suggesting that the
smaller the hunting group the more vulnerable it is to kleptoparasitism. Where
hunting groups of 1-2 would be
particularly vulnerable because they are unable to fully satiate themselves
before spotted hyenas take over their kills. Notably, intermediate-sized
hunting groups may be most effective at meeting nutritional demands over a
range of prey sizes.
Works Cited
Carbone, C., Du Toit,
J. T. & Gordan, I. J. (1997). Feeding success in african wild dogs: Does
kleptoparasitism by spotted hyenas influence
hunting group size? Journal of Ecology (66),
318-326.