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1 October 2012 The Diet of Caracal, Caracal caracal, in Two Areas of the Southern Cape, South Africa as Determined by Scat Analysis
Alexander Braczkowski, Laurence Watson, Damien Coulson, John Lucas, Barry Peiser, Monique Rossi
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Abstract

Caracal (Caracal caracal) diet in southern Africa has primarily been quantified in protected areas dominated by natural vegetation. Here we present data on the diet of caracal ranging in two coastal landscapes (George and Vleesbaai, South Africa) with considerable anthropogenic modification (pine plantation and agricultural land). In terms of the corrected frequency of occurrence (CFO), rodents dominated the diet (>70%) and the vlei rat (Otomys irroratus) formed the bulk in terms of volume of the rodents recorded in the diet at both sites. Bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus) formed an important component of the diet in George (11.4% CFO) while small carnivores comprised 11.6% CFO in Vleesbaai. Although our results are relevant in light of the extensively modified vegetation of this part of South Africa's coastal region, they are unlikely to represent the full extent of the diet in Vleesbaai, as farmers in this region regularly report livestock losses attributed to caracal.

Alexander Braczkowski, Laurence Watson, Damien Coulson, John Lucas, Barry Peiser, and Monique Rossi "The Diet of Caracal, Caracal caracal, in Two Areas of the Southern Cape, South Africa as Determined by Scat Analysis," South African Journal of Wildlife Research 42(2), 111-116, (1 October 2012). https://doi.org/10.3957/056.042.0205
Received: 2 April 2012; Accepted: 1 September 2012; Published: 1 October 2012
KEYWORDS
carnivore diet
pine plantations
scat analysis
urban-development
vlei rat
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