Carrying capacity in arid rangelands during droughts: the role of temporal and spatial thresholds

Assessing the carrying capacity is of primary importance in arid rangelands. This becomes even more important during droughts, when rangelands exhibit non-equilibrium dynamics, and the dynamics of livestock conditions and forage resource are decoupled. Carrying capacity is usually conceived as an eq...

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Main Authors: F. Accatino, D. Ward, K. Wiegand, C. De Michele
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-01-01
Series:Animal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731116001531
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spelling doaj-d5f1b2de311a4a4a8e417bad76e27f982021-06-06T04:52:36ZengElsevierAnimal1751-73112017-01-01112309317Carrying capacity in arid rangelands during droughts: the role of temporal and spatial thresholdsF. Accatino0D. Ward1K. Wiegand2C. De Michele3Faculty of Forest Sciences and Forest Ecology, University of Göttingen, Büsgenweg 4, Göttingen, Germany; UMR SADAPT, INRA, AgroParisTech, Université Paris-Saclay, Paris 75005, FranceSchool of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu Natal, Scottsville 3209, South Africa; Biological Sciences, Kent State University, Kent OH44242, USAFaculty of Forest Sciences and Forest Ecology, University of Göttingen, Büsgenweg 4, Göttingen, GermanyDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Politecnico di Milano, P.zza L. Da Vinci, 32, Milano 20133, ItalyAssessing the carrying capacity is of primary importance in arid rangelands. This becomes even more important during droughts, when rangelands exhibit non-equilibrium dynamics, and the dynamics of livestock conditions and forage resource are decoupled. Carrying capacity is usually conceived as an equilibrium concept, that is, the consumer density that can co-exist in long-term equilibrium with the resource. As one of the first, here we address the concept of carrying capacity in systems, where there is no feedback between consumer and resource in a limited period of time. To this end, we developed an individual-based model describing the basic characteristics of a rangeland during a drought. The model represents a rangeland composed by a single water point and forage distributed all around, with livestock units moving from water to forage and vice versa, for eating and drinking. For each livestock unit we implemented an energy balance and we accounted for the gut-filling effect (i.e. only a limited amount of forage can be ingested per unit time). Our results showed that there is a temporal threshold above which livestock begin to experience energy deficit and burn fat reserves. We demonstrated that such a temporal threshold increases with the number of animals and decreases with the rangeland conditions (amount of forage). The temporal threshold corresponded to the time livestock take to consume all the forage within a certain distance from water, so that the livestock can return to water for drinking without spending more energy than they gain within a day. In this study, we highlight the importance of a time threshold in the assessment of carrying capacity in non-equilibrium conditions. Considering this time threshold could explain contrasting observations about the influence of livestock number on livestock conditions. In case of private rangelands, the herd size should be chosen so that the spatial threshold equals (or exceeds) the length of the drought.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731116001531optimal herd sizewater pointenergy deficitdroughtforaging
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F. Accatino
D. Ward
K. Wiegand
C. De Michele
spellingShingle F. Accatino
D. Ward
K. Wiegand
C. De Michele
Carrying capacity in arid rangelands during droughts: the role of temporal and spatial thresholds
Animal
optimal herd size
water point
energy deficit
drought
foraging
author_facet F. Accatino
D. Ward
K. Wiegand
C. De Michele
author_sort F. Accatino
title Carrying capacity in arid rangelands during droughts: the role of temporal and spatial thresholds
title_short Carrying capacity in arid rangelands during droughts: the role of temporal and spatial thresholds
title_full Carrying capacity in arid rangelands during droughts: the role of temporal and spatial thresholds
title_fullStr Carrying capacity in arid rangelands during droughts: the role of temporal and spatial thresholds
title_full_unstemmed Carrying capacity in arid rangelands during droughts: the role of temporal and spatial thresholds
title_sort carrying capacity in arid rangelands during droughts: the role of temporal and spatial thresholds
publisher Elsevier
series Animal
issn 1751-7311
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Assessing the carrying capacity is of primary importance in arid rangelands. This becomes even more important during droughts, when rangelands exhibit non-equilibrium dynamics, and the dynamics of livestock conditions and forage resource are decoupled. Carrying capacity is usually conceived as an equilibrium concept, that is, the consumer density that can co-exist in long-term equilibrium with the resource. As one of the first, here we address the concept of carrying capacity in systems, where there is no feedback between consumer and resource in a limited period of time. To this end, we developed an individual-based model describing the basic characteristics of a rangeland during a drought. The model represents a rangeland composed by a single water point and forage distributed all around, with livestock units moving from water to forage and vice versa, for eating and drinking. For each livestock unit we implemented an energy balance and we accounted for the gut-filling effect (i.e. only a limited amount of forage can be ingested per unit time). Our results showed that there is a temporal threshold above which livestock begin to experience energy deficit and burn fat reserves. We demonstrated that such a temporal threshold increases with the number of animals and decreases with the rangeland conditions (amount of forage). The temporal threshold corresponded to the time livestock take to consume all the forage within a certain distance from water, so that the livestock can return to water for drinking without spending more energy than they gain within a day. In this study, we highlight the importance of a time threshold in the assessment of carrying capacity in non-equilibrium conditions. Considering this time threshold could explain contrasting observations about the influence of livestock number on livestock conditions. In case of private rangelands, the herd size should be chosen so that the spatial threshold equals (or exceeds) the length of the drought.
topic optimal herd size
water point
energy deficit
drought
foraging
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731116001531
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AT dward carryingcapacityinaridrangelandsduringdroughtstheroleoftemporalandspatialthresholds
AT kwiegand carryingcapacityinaridrangelandsduringdroughtstheroleoftemporalandspatialthresholds
AT cdemichele carryingcapacityinaridrangelandsduringdroughtstheroleoftemporalandspatialthresholds
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