Vetmeduni Vienna: Hidden treasure of the Gobi: How khulans get water

Khulan, a species of wild ass living in the Gobi Desert, travel over extremely long distances to find enough food and meet their water needs. This is the result of a study of GPS tracks, conducted by the Research Institute of Wildlife Ecology (FIWI, Conservation Medicine Unit) at Vetmeduni Vienna, recently published in Scientific Reports. According to the researchers, regional conservation strategies are urgently needed so the khulan can continue to find the hidden liquid treasure of the Gobi Desert in the future.

Most large herbivores in arid landscapes are especially vulnerable to disturbances of their habitat – one of these is the Asiatic wild ass or khulan (Equus hemionus). Until recently widespread and abundant throughout the arid landscapes of Central Asia and Mongolia, the number of khulan has declined dramatically in the 19th and 20th century.  Besides changes in land use and overhunting, the increasing difficulty in accessing water is believed to have played a major role in this development. Until now, however, there had been little data on how water availability is influencing movements.

Waterpoints constitute a key resource for khulan

To find out more about khulan water use, an international research team led by the Research Institute for Wildlife Ecology (FIWI) at the Department of Interdisciplinary Life Sciences at Vetmeduni Vienna examined the world’s largest remaining khulan population in Mongolia’s South Gobi Region. By tagging the khulan with GPS collars in order to track the animals in the 100,000 km² study area, an area larger than Austria, the researchers were able to identify 367 waterpoints, 53 of which received intensive and repeated uses by many different kulan over multiple years and are thus considered to be of high importance for the entire khulan population. However, the large number of less visited waterpoints are also important as they provide “stepping-stones” to switch between areas and allow for maximal movement flexibility.

The need to drink daily is an important driver of khulan movements

According to the researchers, khulan drink almost daily and normally require 12–15 litres of water per day and up to 24 litres on hot days. The low water content of their plant resources further increases the animals’ need to drink. In the Mongolian Gobi, khulan roam over thousands of square kilometres, a range among the largest reported for terrestrial mammals. These large nomadic movements are a consequence of the low and unpredictable resource base with both the availability of pasture and water changing within and between years. To survive and thrive in such landscapes, movement flexibility is key but may be threatened by increasing human impact on the khulan’s habitat resulting in habitat fragmentation. Like in many other of the world’s drylands, human exploitation of water for agriculture, industry, and domestic uses increasingly drives the availability of and access to water for wildlife. Khulan tend to use pastures within 7 km of water and areas beyond 15-20 km of water become functionally inaccessible. “Hence, blocking access to water excludes khulan from the landscape and Identifying important waterpoints in arid landscapes like the Gobi Desert is therefore essential for wildlife-friendly land-use planning,” says John Payne.

Important data for a regional khulan conservation strategy

According to the researchers, the most important variable for the seasonally different use of the waterpoints is snow cover (or the lack thereof). In the deserts of Central Asia and Mongolia, a lack of snow, the low water content of the vegetation, and the freezing of small and stagnant water bodies can result in drought conditions during winter. In extreme cases, these factors can result in winter die-offs of local wildlife populations. Khulan´s highly mobile lifestyle is a coping strategy during localized catastrophic weather events, but this requires habitats that allow large-scale movements – which in turn necessitates maintaining landscape connectivity. Petra Kaczensky: “Our results provide important data that can help guide a regional khulan conservation strategy, allow predictions for other khulan populations, and illustrate the overall importance of waterpoints for dryland herbivores.”

The article “Hidden treasure of the Gobi: understanding how water limits range use of khulan in the Mongolian Gobi” by John Payne, Bayarbaatar Buuveibaatar, Diana Bowler, Kirk Olson, Chris Walzer, and Petra Kaczensky was published in Scientific Reports.

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