Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Testing the effects of ecologically extinct mammals on vegetation in arid Australia: A long‐term experimental approach
View through CrossRef
AbstractThe loss of species from ecosystems can have cascading impacts on species interactions and ecosystem function. Australia has experienced the greatest loss of mammals globally in the past 200 years, but we know little of how the loss of this suite of ecosystem engineers and herbivores has affected vegetation. We used a threatened mammal reintroduction sanctuary to investigate effects of ecologically extinct mammals on plant assemblages. First, we tested the net effects of mammals using a long‐term exclusion experiment within the sanctuary. Second, we used a three‐year disturbance experiment to determine the relative roles of herbivory and physical disturbance in driving changes in plant assemblages. Third, we compared outcomes inside and outside the sanctuary to determine how effects of reintroduced mammals differed from contemporary mammal assemblages. Plant species richness was greatest in mammal exclusion plots and declined across all treatments from 2011 to 2018, probably due to drought. Plant composition changed in response to mammal exclusion, with six species increasing significantly, shrubs and myrmecochorous plants becoming more common and large‐seeded species less common. Responses to experimental disturbance were less clear. Grass and resprouters were more common, and palatable and large‐seeded plants were less common outside the sanctuary (exposed to contemporary mammal assemblage). Our study shows that reintroductions of ecologically extinct mammals have substantial impacts on plant assemblages, both through ecosystem engineering and herbivory, and these impacts differ from those of contemporary mammal faunas, suggesting that pre‐European Australian ecosystems were markedly different from contemporary ecosystems.
Title: Testing the effects of ecologically extinct mammals on vegetation in arid Australia: A long‐term experimental approach
Description:
AbstractThe loss of species from ecosystems can have cascading impacts on species interactions and ecosystem function.
Australia has experienced the greatest loss of mammals globally in the past 200 years, but we know little of how the loss of this suite of ecosystem engineers and herbivores has affected vegetation.
We used a threatened mammal reintroduction sanctuary to investigate effects of ecologically extinct mammals on plant assemblages.
First, we tested the net effects of mammals using a long‐term exclusion experiment within the sanctuary.
Second, we used a three‐year disturbance experiment to determine the relative roles of herbivory and physical disturbance in driving changes in plant assemblages.
Third, we compared outcomes inside and outside the sanctuary to determine how effects of reintroduced mammals differed from contemporary mammal assemblages.
Plant species richness was greatest in mammal exclusion plots and declined across all treatments from 2011 to 2018, probably due to drought.
Plant composition changed in response to mammal exclusion, with six species increasing significantly, shrubs and myrmecochorous plants becoming more common and large‐seeded species less common.
Responses to experimental disturbance were less clear.
Grass and resprouters were more common, and palatable and large‐seeded plants were less common outside the sanctuary (exposed to contemporary mammal assemblage).
Our study shows that reintroductions of ecologically extinct mammals have substantial impacts on plant assemblages, both through ecosystem engineering and herbivory, and these impacts differ from those of contemporary mammal faunas, suggesting that pre‐European Australian ecosystems were markedly different from contemporary ecosystems.
Related Results
GEOINFORMATION FOR DISASTER MANAGEMENT 2020 (GI4DM2020): PREFACE
GEOINFORMATION FOR DISASTER MANAGEMENT 2020 (GI4DM2020): PREFACE
Abstract. Across the world, nature-triggered disasters fuelled by climate change are worsening. Some two billion people have been affected by the consequences of natural hazards ov...
A vegetation classi?cation and map: Guadalupe Mountains National Park
A vegetation classi?cation and map: Guadalupe Mountains National Park
A vegetation classi?cation and map for Guadalupe Mountains National Park (NP) is presented as part of the National Park Service Inventory & Monitoring - Vegetation Inventory Pr...
Incorporating Vegetation Type Transformation with NDVI Time-Series to Study the Vegetation Dynamics in Xinjiang
Incorporating Vegetation Type Transformation with NDVI Time-Series to Study the Vegetation Dynamics in Xinjiang
Time-series normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) is commonly used to conduct vegetation dynamics, which is an important research topic. However, few studies have focused o...
Decoupling and partitioning the effect of climate and afforestation on long‐term vegetation greening in China since the 1990s
Decoupling and partitioning the effect of climate and afforestation on long‐term vegetation greening in China since the 1990s
AbstractVegetation is an essential component of the Earth's surface system, and is a clear indicator to global climate changes. Understanding the long‐term characteristics of veget...
Progressively excluding mammals of different body size affects community and trait structure of ground beetles
Progressively excluding mammals of different body size affects community and trait structure of ground beetles
Mammalian grazing induces changes in vegetation properties in grasslands, which can affect a wide variety of other animals including many arthropods. However, the impacts may depen...
Realization and Prediction of Ecological Restoration Potential of Vegetation in Karst Areas
Realization and Prediction of Ecological Restoration Potential of Vegetation in Karst Areas
Based on the vegetation ecological quality index retrieved by satellite remote sensing in the karst areas of Guangxi in 2000–2019, the status of the ecological restoration of the v...
Differentiation characteristics of karst vegetation resilience and its response to climate and ecological restoration projects
Differentiation characteristics of karst vegetation resilience and its response to climate and ecological restoration projects
AbstractIn light of the recent pressure from global warming, extreme drought events, and deleterious human activity, the strength and long‐term change trends of vegetation in karst...
Impacts of changes in vegetation cover on soil water heat coupling in an alpine meadow of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, China
Impacts of changes in vegetation cover on soil water heat coupling in an alpine meadow of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, China
Abstract. Alpine meadow is one of the most widespread grassland types in the permafrost regions of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, and the transmission of coupled soil water heat is one...

