Habitat loss and degradation reduce the abundance of the glossy grass skink, Pseudemoia rawlinsoni

IF 1.6 3区 生物学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Wildlife Research Pub Date : 2024-03-15 DOI:10.1071/wr23102
Jules E. Farquhar, Lucy Wotherspoon, Hilary Porter, David G. Chapple
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Context

Habitat loss and degradation are major drivers of biodiversity loss worldwide. In particular, wetland environments are being removed and degraded faster than any other terrestrial habitat on earth. The loss and degradation of wetlands has been particularly pronounced in south-eastern Australia.

Aims

Here we investigated the impact of habitat loss and degradation on the Data Deficient glossy grass skink (Pseudemoia rawlinsoni), a species that predominantly favours wetland vegetation in south-eastern Australia.

Methods

We established artificial cover-object (roofing tiles) survey grids in paired remnant and disturbed sites at six locations across Victoria, Australia, and surveyed for skinks between November 2021 and April 2022.

Key results

Sites at which glossy grass skinks occur are characterised by tall dense vegetation, with a high cover of matted biomass. Thermal profiles within these complex vegetation structures remain much cooler during hot days, and warmer during cold nights, than external temperatures. Nearby disturbed sites (i.e. grazed or mowed areas within dispersal distance of remnant sites) are generally devoid of skinks, have very low and structurally simple (open) vegetation, and have thermal regimes that offer lizards no respite from high summer temperatures. We found that roofing tiles are an effective way to survey for glossy grass skinks; even on cool cloudy days, the temperature of tiles, and the lizards sheltering beneath them, are often much higher than ambient temperatures.

Conclusions

These findings implicate habitat loss and degradation as having a substantial negative impact on glossy grass skink presence and abundance; skinks largely avoid disturbed areas, even at sites immediately adjacent to remnant habitat. This may be driven not simply by the removal of tall and dense vegetation structures, but the consequent loss of the optimal thermal buffer afforded by such structures.

Implications

Our study emphasises the threat that habitat loss and degradation pose to wetland species in Australia, and throughout the world.

栖息地的丧失和退化减少了有光泽草石龙子(Pseudemoia rawlinsoni)的数量
背景栖息地丧失和退化是全球生物多样性丧失的主要驱动因素。其中,湿地环境的消失和退化速度比地球上任何其他陆地栖息地都要快。澳大利亚东南部湿地的丧失和退化尤为明显。目的在此,我们研究了栖息地丧失和退化对数据缺失的光泽草石龙子(Pseudemoia rawlinsoni)的影响,该物种主要喜欢澳大利亚东南部的湿地植被。方法我们在澳大利亚维多利亚州的六个地点的成对残存地点和受干扰地点建立了人工覆盖物-目标(屋顶瓦片)调查网格,并在 2021 年 11 月至 2022 年 4 月间对草蜥进行了调查。主要结果有光泽草石龙子出没的地点植被高大茂密,垫状生物量覆盖率高。与外部温度相比,这些复杂植被结构中的热剖面在炎热的白天仍然较低,而在寒冷的夜晚则较高。附近受干扰的地点(即在残存地点散布范围内的放牧区或割草区)一般没有石龙子,植被非常低,结构简单(开阔),其热环境也无法让蜥蜴在夏季高温下得到喘息。我们发现,屋顶瓦片是调查光草石龙子的有效方法;即使在凉爽的阴天,瓦片的温度和躲在瓦片下的蜥蜴的温度也往往比环境温度高得多。结论这些发现表明,栖息地的丧失和退化对光泽草蜥的存在和数量有很大的负面影响;即使在紧邻残存栖息地的地点,草蜥也会在很大程度上避开受干扰的区域。造成这种情况的原因可能不仅仅是高大茂密的植被结构被移除,还可能是这些结构所提供的最佳热缓冲区随之丧失。意义我们的研究强调了栖息地丧失和退化对澳大利亚乃至全世界湿地物种构成的威胁。
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来源期刊
Wildlife Research
Wildlife Research 生物-动物学
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
15.80%
发文量
56
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Wildlife Research represents an international forum for the publication of research and debate on the ecology, management and conservation of wild animals in natural and modified habitats. The journal combines basic research in wildlife ecology with advances in science-based management practice. Subject areas include: applied ecology; conservation biology; ecosystem management; management of over-abundant, pest and invasive species; global change and wildlife management; diseases and their impacts on wildlife populations; human dimensions of management and conservation; assessing management outcomes; and the implications of wildlife research for policy development. Readers can expect a range of papers covering well-structured field studies, manipulative experiments, and analytical and modelling studies. All articles aim to improve the practice of wildlife management and contribute conceptual advances to our knowledge and understanding of wildlife ecology. Wildlife Research is a vital resource for wildlife scientists, students and managers, applied ecologists, conservation biologists, environmental consultants and NGOs and government policy advisors. Wildlife Research is published with the endorsement of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) and the Australian Academy of Science.
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