4.5 Article

Exploring durophagy among modern gray wolves from the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem with dental microwear texture analysis

Journal

JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY
Volume 317, Issue 1, Pages 22-33

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jzo.12957

Keywords

Canis lupus; dental microwear texture analysis; diet; dietary behavior; durophagy; feeding ecology; Yellowstone

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Funding

  1. Resident Fellowship of the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, Cody, Wyoming
  2. National Science Foundation [NSF 1053839]
  3. Vanderbilt University

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This study examines the bone utilization and durophagy behaviors of gray wolves from the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE) using dental microwear texture analysis (DMTA). The results show that the dietary behavior of wolves is not correlated with factors such as sex, body size, pack association, or age class. Additionally, there is an increased carcass exploitation in the contemporary GYE wolf population, suggesting a possible long-term trend linked to decreased winter severity and climate change.
Gray wolf (Canis lupus) dietary behavior can be highly variable; prey species for wolves span a range of ungulates to the consumption of smaller animals. While prey species for wolves are well documented, carcass utilization within and between wolf populations is less understood. This paper examines a modern population of wolves from the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE) with dental microwear texture analysis (DMTA) to gauge utilization of bone resources, or durophagy, across biological, physical, social, geographical, and temporal variables. Results indicate gradation in durophagous behavior among GYE wolves does not correlate with sex, intra-population body size (as inferred from skeletal and soft tissue measurements), pack association, or age class. Together, findings suggest that feeding ecologies for wolves are not specific to these factors. We also found that antemortem tooth breakage rates are not positively correlated with dental microwear textures that infer durophagy. We further compare dental microwear measures with previously published data from Alaskan wolves, who were collected decades before the GYE wolf sample. Results imply elevated carcass exploitation in the contemporary GYE wolf population sample. If minimal inter-population differences are assumed, data presented here show dietary behaviors of North American gray wolves have changed over the past fifty years, indicating a possible long-term trend that may be linked to decreased winter severity and climate change.

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