We measured water-influx rate during the hot summer in free-ranging adult Arabian oryxes (Oryx leucoryx) in Mahazat as-Sayd, a 2,244-km2 protected area in west-central Saudi Arabia. Oryxes obtained 2,294 ml/day of water in their food and from oxidative water, the latter amounting to 14.2% of total water influx. For ungulates living in hot environments, we constructed an allometric curve: log(water-influx rate [liters/day]) = −0.885 0.922·log(body mass [kg]), (r2 = 0.77, F = 26.8, P < 0.001, n = 10). The Arabian oryx had the lowest mass-specific water-influx rate (31.5 ml kg−0.922 day−1), only 32% that of the camel (99.3 ml kg−0.922 day−1), emphasizing the degree of evolutionary specialization in oryx. Between June and September, oryxes grazed primarily on 3 grasses, Panicum turgidum, Lasiurus scindicus, and Stipagrostis. P. turgidum, taken in largest quantity, had the highest moisture content, 35–45% per g of wet matter. Dry matter intake averaged about 3.1 kg during the summer months; plant intake varied inversely with moisture content.
How to translate text using browser tools
1 August 2002
WATER INFLUX AND FOOD CONSUMPTION OF FREE-LIVING ORYXES (ORYX LEUCORYX) IN THE ARABIAN DESERT IN SUMMER
Stéphane Ostrowski,
Joseph B. Williams,
Eric Bedin,
Khairi Ismail
ACCESS THE FULL ARTICLE
allometry
antelope
Arabian oryx
Artiodactyla
desert
Oryx leucoryx
water influx