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Diet of the grey wolf Canis lupus in Roztocze and Solska Forest, south-east Poland

Author
Pierużek-Nowak, Sabina
Mysłajek, Robert
Tołkacz, Katarzyna
Stępniak, Kinga M.
Kwiatkowska, Iga
Korga, Michał
Stefański, Robert
Nędzyńska-Stygar, Monika
Figura, Michał
Stachyra, Przemysław
Publication date
2022
Abstract (EN)

The diet composition and prey selection of grey wolves (Canis lupus) inhabiting the Roztocze and Solska Forest (south-east Poland) was studied based on an analysis of scats collected in 2001-2002 (n = 84) and 2017-2020 (n = 302). In both periods, wolves preyed mainly on wild ungulates (96.5-96.7% of consumed biomass). Roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) was the most critical wolf prey accounting for 57.8% of consumed biomass in 2001-2002 and 49.2% and 2017-2020, but wolves positively select only wild boar (Jacob's selectivity index D = 0.213 in 2001-2002 and 0.710 in 2017-2020) and fallow deer (D = 0.588 only in 2017-2020). The largest species – moose Alces alces and red deer Cervus elaphus – were consumed less than expected from their share in the ungulate community. Predation on medium-sized wild mammals and domestic animals was low, 0.8-2.2% and 1.1-2.7% of the biomass consumed, respectively. The breadth of the wolf diet was very narrow and identical in both study periods (B = 1.07), while the similarity of diet composition was high (α = 0.999). This study indicated the stability of the wolf diet over two decades and the importance of wild boar as a food source for this carnivore.

Keywords EN
diet composition
food habits
prey selection
PBN discipline
biological sciences
Journal
Journal of Vertebrate Biology
Volume
71
Issue
brak
Pages from-to
22040
ISSN
2694-7684
Date release in open access
2022-10-03
Open access license
Attribution