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First published online March 30, 2006
Journal of Experimental Biology 209, 1535-1547 (2006)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2006
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02137
Forage fibre digestion, rates of feed passage and gut fill in juvenile and adult red kangaroos Macropus rufus Desmarest: why body size matters
School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia
* Author for correspondence at present address: Institute of Wildlife Research, School of Biological Sciences, A08 University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia (e-mail: a.munn{at}unswalumni.com)
Accepted 31 January 2006
Using red kangaroos Macropus rufus Desmarest, a large (>20 kg)
marsupial herbivore, we compared the digestive capabilities of juveniles with
those of mature, non-lactating females on high-quality forage (chopped lucerne
Medicago sativa hay) of 43±1% neutral-detergent fibre (NDF)
and poorer quality, high-fibre forage (chopped oaten Avena sativa
hay) of 64±1% NDF. On chopped lucerne apparent dry matter (DM)
digestibilities by young-at-foot (YAF) red kangaroos (an age that would
normally be taking some milk from their mother), weaned juveniles and mature
females were similar (5559%). On chopped oaten hay apparent DM
digestibility was lower in the YAF (35.9±2.3%) followed by weaned
(43.4±2.8%) and mature females (44.6±1%). The digestion of NDF
and its components (mainly cellulose and hemicellulose) was lowest among the
YAF followed by weaned and then mature females. The YAF and weaned kangaroos
could not sustain growth on the poor-quality diet, and appeared to be at or
near maximal gut fill on both forages; the values being 114122 g DM for
YAF and 151159 g DM for weaned kangaroos. Mean retention times (MRT) of
particle and solute markers were significantly longer for the YAF and weaned
kangaroos on oaten hay than on lucerne hay, and DM intake (g
d1) was
50% lower on the oaten hay. In contrast, solute
and particle MRTs in the mature females were not significantly affected by
diet; they maintained DM intakes by increasing DM gut fill from 264±24
g on chopped lucerne to 427±26 g DM on chopped oaten hay. Clearly, the
mature female kangaroos did not maximise gut fill on the high-quality forage,
presumably as a consequence of their proportionally lower energy requirements
compared with still-growing juveniles. Overall, we have provided the first
mechanistic link between the physiological constraints faced by juvenile red
kangaroos in relation to their drought-related mortalities, rainfall and
forage quality.
Key words: herbivore, kangaroo, juvenile mortality, fibre digestion, gut fill
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