Investigating the impacts of donkeys on a communal range in Namaqualand: how much does a donkey "cost" in goat units?
Bachelor Thesis
1996
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University of Cape Town
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Abstract
Donkeys are used extensively in Namaqualand and other rural areas in South Africa for pulling carts, carrying loads, ploughing and threshing grain. There is, however, an ongoing debate among farmers, agriculturalists and the wider population about the implications of keeping donkeys, particularly on communal lands. Donkeys are reported to cause more damage to the veld than other animals, and it is commonly said that one donkey eats as much as seven goats. This project was initiated as a case study to investigate the impacts of donkeys in a communal area in the succulent shrublands of Namaqualand, and to generate suggestions for the management of donkey populations. The degree of competition between goats and donkeys was investigated by predicting daily food intake using a model based on ruminant and non-ruminant digestion, which takes into account the animal's body weight and digestibility characteristics of its diet. The ratio predicted food intakes is discussed in the light of the degree of dietary and habitat overlap, which were obtained from field observations. Habitat use was scored using dung frequency transects, and feeding was directly observed. It was found that in the wet season, one donkey eats as much as 5 / 7.6 goats (donkey weight set at 200 and 250 kg respectively). In the dry summer, this ratio increases to 7.6 / 8.6 because in ruminants, the passage of food through the gut slows down as the digestibility of the diet decreases. Habitat overlap is concentrated in the riverine areas and sandy pediments, which make up 15 % of the landscape and are strongly favoured by donkeys. No significant differences were found to exist between the intensities of goat use of the different habitats. The botanical composition of the diets of donkeys and goats were found to be similar, but there is a great difference in the quality of the diet consumed by each species as goats are able to select plant parts of a higher quality. The implications of this are that whereas a donkey takes in as much dry matter as 5 - 8.6 goats, the diet of this food is not high enough to satisfy the dietary requirements of goats, and hence fewer goats than predicted can be supported for every donkey that is eliminated. Donkeys are commonly reported to have destructive feeding habits; little of this was directly observed, but donkeys were found to bite deeper into the wood of shrubs, which may damage the plants in the long term. There are two main management measures that should be applied. The feral donkey population in Paulshoek, estimated at 50-100 animals, must be eliminated - even at a conservative estimate, these animals could be replaced with 250 goats. However, one must look beyond the number to the processes taking place to make management effective. Even if one donkey can be replaced with fewer than 5 goats, the vegetation is relieved of the indirect effects donkeys have through their feeding habits. Control of working donkeys should focus on the riverine and flat, sandy areas, as they are potentially of high nutritional importance (especially the riverine areas which support grass throughout the year), and which are also the most susceptible to erosion due to their sparse vegetation cover. These areas are small and valuable, and plans should be made to protect some areas through the growing season.
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Vetter, S. 1996. Investigating the impacts of donkeys on a communal range in Namaqualand: how much does a donkey "cost" in goat units?. University of Cape Town.