For many years, scientists from the Faculty of Environmental Protection have been collaborating with colleagues from the Faculty of Biotechnology at the University of Ljubljana and the Faculty of Mathematics, Natural Sciences and Information Technologies at the University of Primorska on research on large wild mammals (game and carnivores). In a well-established consortium, they are carrying out several international, basic and targeted research projects (CRP); in the CRP project Carnivores affect ungulates: determination of species-specific predation rate and the importance for management of wild large mammals in Slovenia (V1-2031), funded by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Food and the The Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency (ARIS), among other things, they have been investigating the representation of wild ungulates and other animal species in the diet of wolves (Canis lupus) and lynx (Lynx lynx) in the Alps and the Dinarides. The findings, which were obtained by developing and applying a modern methodology, i.e. molecular (genetic) analysis of environmental DNA (e-DNA) or by determining the presence of prey species DNA in the faeces of the two target species of large carnivores, have just been published in the prestigious scientific journal Frontiers in Zoology, under the leadership of FVO collaborator Prof. Elena Bužan, Ph.D., thus making an important contribution to the scientific dissemination of the results of the project. As ungulates and large carnivores are a very important component of forest ecosystems, the publication is also a unique contribution to International Day of Forests, which is celebrated on 21 March each year.
Molecular analysis of scats revealed the diet of wolves and lynxes in Slovenia
The full article is available HERE. |