Within-Group Competition and Foraging Behaviour in Female Asian Elephants (Elephas maximus) in Nagarahole National Park, southern India
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Abstract
Within-group competition for food resources is the primary cost faced by group-living
females. Asian elephant females form fission-fusion societies in which competition might
be minimized by the potential for temporary group fission. However, a constraint on female
group size was still found previously in the Kabini elephant population in southern India,
suggesting that there might be competition for food resources. In this study, I examined the
effects of age, dominance rank, group size, and feeding activity type on individual
behavioural characteristics of adult females, such as food-site residence time, feeding rates
and feeding costs (number of steps and time taken to move between successive feeding
sites). I also examined if quantitative measures of grass distribution explained the observed
behavioural measures. I found that there seemed to be a moderate level of patchiness in
grass resources based on the average food site residence time and the steps moved to a new
feeding site. Dominance rank (based on contest competition) had an effect on food-site
residence time, with more dominant females spending more time at feeding sites. Grass
abundance also affected food-site residence time positively. Feeding rates, apart from being
influenced by feeding activity type, increased with increasing group size, suggesting that
scramble competition was also significant. However, I did not find patch depletion (another
measure of scramble competition) by groups at the temporal scale that I examined,
suggesting that there were sufficient feeding sites available at that scale.