News

How jackals' taste for melons helps fruit flourish in Namibian desert

Fresh Melon (Muskmelon)
Fruits
Namibia
Innovation & Technology
Published Mar 4, 2024

Tridge summary

A study by Namibian scientist Saima Shikesho reveals that black-backed jackals in Namibia urinate on sweet melons in the Namib Desert to deter other jackals from stealing their favourite fruit. These jackals play a key role in the propagation of the nara plant, a desert shrub that produces these melons, as their less developed molars allow the seeds to pass through them intact. The study also found that jackals visited the plants over 96% of the time, compared to other carnivores.
Disclaimer: The above summary was generated by a state-of-the-art LLM model and is intended for informational purposes only. It is recommended that readers refer to the original article for more context.

Original content

Black-backed jackals in Namibia urinate on sweet melons that grow in the Namib Desert to prevent other jackals stealing their favourite fruit, new research has revealed. The finding sheds new light on how the plants have populated the harsh environment, providing other species with a crucial source of food and moisture. Namibian scientist Saima Shikesho made the discovery while studying the role the jackals played in distributing the seeds of the nara plant – a desert shrub only found in Namibia that produces large, round, sweet melons encased in tough, spiny skin. Shikesho was surprised, when she reviewed images obtained via camera traps, that the small fox-like animals occasionally squatted or cocked their legs to urinate on the fruit. “It could work as territorial marking, but another question that came in my mind was: 'Are they trying to hide the scent of ripe melons, or like, it's about to ripen but it's not really there and therefore, if I mark it, maybe other animals will ...
Source: Modernghana
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