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Dive into the research topics where Y. Pretorius is active.

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Featured researches published by Y. Pretorius.


Journal of Animal Ecology | 2011

Soil nutrient status determines how elephant utilize trees and shape environments

Y. Pretorius; Fred W. de Boer; Cornelis van der Waal; Henjo de Knegt; Rina C. Grant; N. Knox; Edward M. Kohi; Emmanuel Mwakiwa; Bruce R. Page; Mike J. S. Peel; Andrew K. Skidmore; Rob Slotow; Sipke E. van Wieren; Herbert H. T. Prins

1. Elucidation of the mechanism determining the spatial scale of patch selection by herbivores has been complicated by the way in which resource availability at a specific scale is measured and by vigilance behaviour of the herbivores themselves. To reduce these complications, we studied patch selection by an animal with negligible predation risk, the African elephant. 2. We introduce the concept of nutrient load as the product of patch size, number of patches and local patch nutrient concentration. Nutrient load provides a novel spatially explicit expression of the total available nutrients a herbivore can select from. 3. We hypothesized that elephant would select nutrient-rich patches, based on the nutrient load per 2500 m(2) down to the individual plant scale, and that this selection will depend on the nitrogen and phosphorous contents of plants. 4. We predicted that elephant would cause more adverse impact to trees of lower value to them in order to reach plant parts with higher nutrient concentrations such as bark and root. However, elephant should maintain nutrient-rich trees by inducing coppicing of trees through re-utilization of leaves. 5. Elephant patch selection was measured in a homogenous tree species stand by manipulating the spatial distribution of soil nutrients in a large field experiment using NPK fertilizer. 6. Elephant were able to select nutrient-rich patches and utilized Colophospermum mopane trees inside these patches more than outside, at scales ranging from 2500 down to 100 m(2) . 7. Although both nitrogen and phosphorus contents of leaves from C. mopane trees were higher in fertilized and selected patches, patch choice correlated most strongly with nitrogen content. As predicted, stripping of leaves occurred more in nutrient-rich patches, while adverse impact such as uprooting of trees occurred more in nutrient-poor areas. 8. Our results emphasize the necessity of including scale-dependent selectivity in foraging studies and how elephant foraging behaviour can be used as indicators of change in the availability of nutrients.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2010

Spatial distribution of lion kills determined by the water dependency of prey species

Willem F. de Boer; Marc J. P. Vis; Henrik J. de Knegt; Colin Rowles; Edward M. Kohi; Frank van Langevelde; M. Peel; Y. Pretorius; Andrew K. Skidmore; Rob Slotow; Sipke E. van Wieren; Herbert H. T. Prins

Abstract Predation risk from lions (Panthera leo) has been linked to habitat characteristics and availability and traits of prey. We separated the effects of vegetation density and the presence of drinking water by analyzing locations of lion kills in relation to rivers with dense vegetation, which offer good lion stalking opportunities, and artificial water points with low vegetation density. The spatial distribution of lion kills was studied at the Klaserie Private Nature Reserve, South Africa. The distance between 215 lion kills and the nearest water source was analyzed using generalized linear models. Lions selected medium-sized prey species. Lion kills were closer to rivers and to artificial water points than expected by random distribution of the kills. Water that attracted prey, and not the vegetation density in riverine areas, increased predation risk, with kills of buffalo (Syncerus caffer), kudu (Tragelaphus strepsiceros), and wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) as water-dependent prey species. Traits of prey species, including feeding type (food habits), digestion type (ruminant or nonruminant), or body size, did not explain locations of lion kills, and no seasonal patterns in lion kills were apparent. We argue that the cascading impact of lions on local mammal assemblages is spatially heterogeneous.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2013

Optimization of wildlife management in a large game reserve through waterpoints manipulation: a bio-economic analysis

Emmanuel Mwakiwa; W.F. de Boer; John W. Hearne; Rob Slotow; F. van Langevelde; M. Peel; Cornelia C. Grant; Y. Pretorius; J.D. Stigter; Andrew K. Skidmore; I.M.A. Heitkonig; H.J. de Knegt; Edward M. Kohi; N. Knox; Herbert H. T. Prins

Surface water is one of the constraining resources for herbivore populations in semi-arid regions. Artificial waterpoints are constructed by wildlife managers to supplement natural water supplies, to support herbivore populations. The aim of this paper is to analyse how a landowner may realize his ecological and economic goals by manipulating waterpoints for the management of an elephant population, a water-dependent species in the presence of water-independent species. We develop a theoretical bio-economic framework to analyse the optimization of wildlife management objectives (in this case revenue generation from both consumptive and non-consumptive use and biodiversity conservation), using waterpoint construction as a control variable. The model provides a bio-economic framework for analysing optimization problems where a control has direct effects on one herbivore species but indirect effects on the other. A landowner may be interested only in maximization of profits either from elephant offtake and/or tourism revenue, ignoring the negative effects that could be brought about by elephants to biodiversity. If the landowner does not take the indirect effects of waterpoints into consideration, then the game reserve management, as the authority entrusted with the sustainable management of the game reserve, might use economic instruments such as subsidies or taxes to the landowners to enforce sound waterpoint management.


Journal of Animal Ecology | 2011

The spatial scaling of habitat selection by African elephants

Henrik J. de Knegt; Frank van Langevelde; Andrew K. Skidmore; Audrey Delsink; Rob Slotow; Steve Henley; Gabriela Bucini; Willem F. de Boer; Michael B. Coughenour; Cornelia C. Grant; Ignas M. A. Heitkönig; Michelle Henley; N. Knox; Edward M. Kohi; Emmanuel Mwakiwa; Bruce R. Page; Mike J. S. Peel; Y. Pretorius; Sipke E. van Wieren; Herbert H. T. Prins


European Journal of Wildlife Research | 2012

Seasonal diet changes in elephant and impala in mopane woodland

Martine Kos; Arno J. Hoetmer; Y. Pretorius; Willem F. de Boer; Henjo de Knegt; Cornelia C. Grant; Edward M. Kohi; Bruce R. Page; Mike J. S. Peel; Rob Slotow; Cornelis van der Waal; Sipke E. van Wieren; Herbert H. T. Prins; Frank van Langevelde


Oikos | 2012

Diet selection of African elephant over time shows changing optimization currency

Y. Pretorius; J.D. Stigter; W.F. de Boer; S.E. van Wieren; C.B. de Jong; H.J. de Knegt; Cameron C. Grant; I.M.A. Heitkonig; N. Knox; Edward M. Kohi; Emmanuel Mwakiwa; M.J.S. Peel; Andrew K. Skidmore; Rob Slotow; C. van der Waal; F. van Langevelde; Herbert H. T. Prins


Acta Zoologica | 2016

Why elephant have trunks and giraffe long tongues: how plants shape large herbivore mouth morphology

Y. Pretorius; Willem F. de Boer; Kim Kortekaas; Machiel van Wijngaarden; Rina C. Grant; Edward M. Kohi; Emmanuel Mwakiwa; Rob Slotow; Herbert H. T. Prins


Oecologia | 2016

Scale-dependent bi-trophic interactions in a semi-arid savanna: how herbivores eliminate benefits of nutrient patchiness to plants

Cornelis van der Waal; Hans de Kroon; Frank van Langevelde; Willem F. de Boer; Ignas M. A. Heitkönig; Rob Slotow; Y. Pretorius; Herbert H. T. Prins


European Journal of Agronomy | 2007

Seasonal diet switch in elephant and impala in a Mopane woodland

Martine Kos; A.J. Hoetmer; Y. Pretorius; W.F. de Boer


Oryx | 2018

The status of African elephant Loxodonta africana populations in South Africa

Y. Pretorius; Marion E. Garaï; Lucy A. Bates

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Edward M. Kohi

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Rob Slotow

University College London

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Emmanuel Mwakiwa

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Herbert H. T. Prins

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Willem F. de Boer

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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F. van Langevelde

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Frank van Langevelde

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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H.J. de Knegt

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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W.F. de Boer

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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