2010
DOI: 10.1017/s1751731109991078
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Using faecal DNA to determine consumption by kangaroos of plants considered palatable to sheep

Abstract: Disagreement exists within the scientific community with regards to the level of competition for feed between sheep and kangaroos in the Australian rangelands. The greatest challenge to solving this debate is finding effective means of determining the composition of the diets of these potential grazing competitors. An option is to adopt a non-invasive approach that combines faecal collection and molecular techniques that focus on faecal DNA as the primary source of dietary information. As proof-of-concept, we … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…Limited information suggests that laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy of faeces is likely to be a valuable technique to identify the plant species and plant species groups in the diet of grazing ruminants from measurements of faeces (Anderson et al, 1998;Obeidat et al, 2007). Plant DNA in faeces has been examined to identify the plant species present in the diet of herbivores (Ho et al, 2010). However, much more research is needed to evaluate and develop both of these techniques before they can be applied routinely to grazing livestock.…”
Section: Evaluation Of Pasture Attributesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Limited information suggests that laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy of faeces is likely to be a valuable technique to identify the plant species and plant species groups in the diet of grazing ruminants from measurements of faeces (Anderson et al, 1998;Obeidat et al, 2007). Plant DNA in faeces has been examined to identify the plant species present in the diet of herbivores (Ho et al, 2010). However, much more research is needed to evaluate and develop both of these techniques before they can be applied routinely to grazing livestock.…”
Section: Evaluation Of Pasture Attributesmentioning
confidence: 99%