Disturbance and ecosystem management interact to shape reptile body condition

IF 2.8 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
K. J. Macdonald, T. S. Doherty, B. A. Hradsky, D. A. Driscoll
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Abstract

Fire, invasive predators and low rainfall are key disturbances that interact to negatively impact wildlife. Reptiles are a highly threatened group, yet they have rarely been the focus of threat interaction research. Research assessing the impacts of disturbance on wildlife have typically focussed on changes in species richness and abundance. However, these metrics largely overlook the non‐lethal effects on individuals and populations persisting within disturbed landscapes. Body condition is an individual‐level response metric that is easily obtainable and provides insight into the cumulative behavioural and morphological changes within a population. We used a landscape‐scale natural experiment in southern Australia to investigate the impacts of prescribed fire severity, invasive red fox (Vulpes vulpes) control, low rainfall conditions and their interactive effects on reptile body condition. Low rainfall had pervasive negative effects on body condition, while prescribed fire had negative effects on the larger, viviparous species. We found a three‐way interactive effect, whereby the negative effects of fire and low rainfall were greater in areas where red foxes were controlled. These results indicate that there are complex ecological interactions at play, potentially including intra‐specific competition and interspecific interactions. Lower body condition in disturbed environments could have lasting implications for individual fitness and population persistence. For instance, species with lower body condition one‐year post‐fire could be more vulnerable to another fire event, compared to species that are able to maintain condition in post‐fire landscapes. With reptile body condition lower in a drier year, we advise minimising additional disturbance (e.g. avoid prescribed fires) during low rainfall years and drought periods. Along with research into ecological interactions, understanding how body condition indices relate to altered fitness is a priority knowledge gap. Such research could improve the ability to predict how species and populations will respond to future disturbances, a key challenge in wildlife disturbance research.

Abstract Image

干扰和生态系统管理相互作用,影响爬行动物的身体状况
火灾、外来掠食者和低降雨量是对野生动物产生负面影响的主要干扰因素。爬行动物是一个受到严重威胁的群体,但它们却很少成为威胁相互作用研究的重点。评估干扰对野生动物影响的研究通常侧重于物种丰富度和丰度的变化。然而,这些指标在很大程度上忽略了在受干扰景观中持续存在的个体和种群所受到的非致命影响。身体状况是个体层面的反应指标,很容易获得,并能深入了解种群内累积的行为和形态变化。我们在澳大利亚南部进行了一次景观尺度的自然实验,研究了明火严重程度、入侵红狐(Vulpes vulpes)控制、低降雨量条件及其交互作用对爬行动物身体状况的影响。低降雨量对爬行动物的身体状况有普遍的负面影响,而明火对体型较大的胎生物种有负面影响。我们发现了一种三方互动效应,即在控制红狐的地区,火灾和低降雨量的负面影响更大。这些结果表明,存在着复杂的生态相互作用,可能包括种内竞争和种间相互作用。在受干扰的环境中,较低的身体状况可能会对个体的适应性和种群的持久性产生持久的影响。例如,与能够在火灾后地貌中保持身体状况的物种相比,火灾后一年身体状况较低的物种可能更容易受到另一次火灾事件的影响。由于爬行动物在干旱年份的身体状况较差,我们建议在降雨量较少的年份和干旱时期尽量减少额外的干扰(如避免明火)。除了对生态相互作用的研究之外,了解身体状况指数与改变的适应性之间的关系也是一个优先知识缺口。此类研究可以提高预测物种和种群如何应对未来干扰的能力,而这正是野生动物干扰研究的一个关键挑战。
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来源期刊
Animal Conservation
Animal Conservation 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
5.90%
发文量
71
审稿时长
12-24 weeks
期刊介绍: Animal Conservation provides a forum for rapid publication of novel, peer-reviewed research into the conservation of animal species and their habitats. The focus is on rigorous quantitative studies of an empirical or theoretical nature, which may relate to populations, species or communities and their conservation. We encourage the submission of single-species papers that have clear broader implications for conservation of other species or systems. A central theme is to publish important new ideas of broad interest and with findings that advance the scientific basis of conservation. Subjects covered include population biology, epidemiology, evolutionary ecology, population genetics, biodiversity, biogeography, palaeobiology and conservation economics.
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