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Foraging Behavior of Alberes Cattle in a Mediterranean Forest Ecosystem
Authors:Jordi Bartolomé  Josefina Plaixats  Jesús Piedrafita  Marta Fina  Eduard Adrobau  Aida Aixàs  Marina Bonet  Jordi Grau  Lluis Polo
Affiliation:1. Professors, Ruminants Research Group, Animal Science and Food Department, Autonomous University of Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain;2. Full Professor, Ruminants Research Group, Animal Science and Food Department, Autonomous University of Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain;3. PhD Student, Ruminants Research Group, Animal Science and Food Department, Autonomous University of Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain;4. PhD Students, Environmental Science Department, University of Girona, 17071 Girona, Spain;5. Professor, Environmental Science Department, University of Girona, 17071 Girona, Spain;2. USDA, ARS, Conservation and Production Research Laboratory, 2300 Experiment Station Road, Bushland, TX 79012
Abstract:The dietary composition of the semiferal cattle population in the Alberes Natural Park in northeastern Spain was determined four times per year, from June 2002 to February 2004, by microhistological analysis of a total of 120 fecal samples. Woody species, mainly the Quercus and Erica genera, formed the bulk of the diet, reaching 89% of it in winter. However, in spring and summer, the proportion of woody and herbaceous species varied between samples, depending on the habitat where they were collected. The forest samples contained 67% woody species in summer, whereas grassland samples only contained 44%. The results showed that the Alberes cattle population grazed actively in Mediterranean forests and consumed a high proportion of the most combustible species, such as the Erica genus (39% of the epidermal fragments in winter samples). Even when grassland habitat was utilized, in spring and summer, one-third of the diet was from woody species. Some bovines, such as the Alberes cattle breed, can therefore survive year-round in a forest habitat with little forage supplementation, and the consumption of a predominantly woody diet would be expected to reduce forest fire hazards.
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