Wildlife on Serengeti Migrate to Cleaner Water

Michael Reilly, Discovery News
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However, John Fryxall of the University of Guelph in Canada said declining nutrients in grasses may drive migration, rather than water quality.

"These animals need the green flush of nutrients in early growth-stage grasses," he said. Grasses growing late in the wet season are too long and full of woody material that animals can't digest.

In addition, animals also have to compete with humans living nearby for water. Villages surrounding the park are swelling, thanks in part to tourism generated by the famous wildlife. Local inhabitants are increasingly diverting river water for irrigation and drinking.

"There is increasing demand for a finite water resource," Fryxall said. "Future changes in water quality will be important to pay attention to; worsening quality could impose additional mortality on the animals."


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