History of Animals using Isotope Records (HAIR): A 6-year dietary history of one family of African elephants

  1. Thure E. Cerlinga,b,1,
  2. George Wittemyerc,d,
  3. James R. Ehleringerb,
  4. Christopher H. Remiene and
  5. Iain Douglas-Hamiltond,f
  1. Departments of aGeology and Geophysics,
  2. bBiology, and
  3. eMathematics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112;
  4. cDepartment of Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523;
  5. dSave-The-Elephants, P.O. Box 54667, Nairobi, Kenya; and
  6. fDepartment of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PS, United Kingdom
  1. Contributed by Thure E. Cerling, March 3, 2009 (sent for review December 26, 2008)

Abstract

The dietary and movement history of individual animals can be studied using stable isotope records in animal tissues, providing insight into long-term ecological dynamics and a species niche. We provide a 6-year history of elephant diet by examining tail hair collected from 4 elephants in the same social family unit in northern Kenya. Sequential measurements of carbon, nitrogen, and hydrogen isotope rations in hair provide a weekly record of diet and water resources. Carbon isotope ratios were well correlated with satellite-based measurements of the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) of the region occupied by the elephants as recorded by the global positioning system (GPS) movement record; the absolute amount of C4 grass consumption is well correlated with the maximum value of NDVI during individual wet seasons. Changes in hydrogen isotope ratios coincided very closely in time with seasonal fluctuations in rainfall and NDVI whereas diet shifts to relatively high proportions of grass lagged seasonal increases in NDVI by ≈2 weeks. The peak probability of conception in the population occurred ≈3 weeks after peak grazing. Spatial and temporal patterns of resource use show that the only period of pure browsing by the focal elephants was located in an over-grazed, communally managed region outside the protected area. The ability to extract time-specific longitudinal records on animal diets, and therefore the ecological history of an organism and its environment, provides an avenue for understanding the impact of climate dynamics and land-use change on animal foraging behavior and habitat relations.

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Footnotes

  • 1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: thure.cerling{at}utah.edu
  • Author contributions: T.E.C., G.W., J.R.E., and I.D.-H. designed research; T.E.C., G.W., J.R.E., and I.D.-H. performed research; C.H.R. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; T.E.C., G.W., J.R.E., C.H.R., and I.D.-H. analyzed data; and T.E.C. and G.W. wrote the paper.

  • The authors declare no conflict of interest.