有烟的地方就有猫:长期未被焚烧的栖息地对于减轻猫对 Ngarlgumirdi 大山熊(Macrotis lagotis)的影响至关重要

IF 1.6 3区 生物学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Wildlife Research Pub Date : 2024-04-23 DOI:10.1071/wr23117
Harry A. Moore, Yawuru Country Managers, Bardi Jawi Oorany Rangers, Nyul Nyul Rangers, Nykina Mangala Rangers, Lesley A. Gibson, Martin A. Dziminski, Ian J. Radford, Ben Corey, Karen Bettink, Fiona M. Carpenter, Ruth McPhail, Tracy Sonneman, Bruce Greatwich
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景据信,与澳大利亚其它临界体重分布区的哺乳动物一样,大山熊(Macrotis lagotis)或Ngarlgumirdi(Yawuru)的减少主要是由于野猫和狐狸的捕食、大型引进食草动物对栖息地的干扰以及野火频率和强度的增加所造成的协同影响。尽管已经证明,在某些栖息地进行低强度的规定焚烧,可以创造具有足够植被覆盖度的栖息地,从而使包括Ngarlgumirdi在内的哺乳动物受益,但具体的焚烧特性对Ngarlgumirdi持续生存的贡献仍不清楚。目的阐明丹皮尔半岛上火灾镶嵌属性对Ngarlgumirdi栖息地的影响。方法我们利用四个土著护林员小组收集的 2 公顷标志图数据,结合 20 年的卫星火灾历史信息,研究了火灾属性对西金伯利地区丹皮尔半岛上 Ngarlgumirdi 和野猫(Felis catus)的多尺度影响。主要结果我们发现,Ngarlgumirdi在至少3年未被烧毁的栖息地比例较高的地区更为常见,而野猫在这些地区的数量较少。同样,Ngarlgumirdi 不太可能出现在火灾频发的地区,而猫在这些地区却更为常见。结论我们的研究结果表明,降低火灾频率和扩大长期未燃烧栖息地(3 年)的范围对于保护丹皮尔半岛的 Ngarlgumirdi 和减轻野猫对生态的破坏非常重要。不同空间尺度(每个监测点的半径分别为 1、3、5 和 10 公里)的研究结果是一致的。影响这些结果表明,在没有直接野猫控制方法的情况下,火灾管理有可能提高本地物种的恢复能力。此外,这些结果还支持了最近由传统所有者领导的跨权属倡议,该倡议旨在实施火灾管理,以减少丹皮尔半岛大规模、频繁发生的严重野火,并增加长期未被烧毁的植被面积。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Where there’s smoke, there’s cats: long-unburnt habitat is crucial to mitigating the impacts of cats on the Ngarlgumirdi, greater bilby (Macrotis lagotis)
Context

The decline of the greater bilby (Macrotis lagotis), or Ngarlgumirdi (Yawuru), like other critical-weight range Australian mammals, is believed to be primarily due to the synergetic impacts of predation by feral cats and foxes, habitat disturbance caused by large introduced herbivores, and increases in the frequency and intensity of wildfires. Although it has been demonstrated that low-intensity prescribed burning mosaics in some habitats have the potential to benefit mammals, including Ngarlgumirdi, by creating habitat with sufficient vegetation cover, the contributions of specific fire-mosaic attributes to Ngarlgumirdi persistence remain unclear.

Aims

To elucidate the impacts of fire-mosaic attributes on the occupancy of Ngarlgumirdi on the Dampier Peninsula.

Methods

We used 2-ha sign-plot data collected by four Indigenous Ranger groups, in combination with 20 years of satellite-derived fire-history information to investigate the multiscale impacts of fire attributes on Ngarlgumirdi and feral cats (Felis catus) on the Dampier Peninsula in the West Kimberley region, a large, unfenced landscape in the most fire-prone section of the Ngarlgumirdi’s current range.

Key results

We found that Ngarlgumirdi was more common in areas that had a higher proportion of habitat that had not burnt for at least 3 years, whereas feral cats were less prevalent in these areas. Similarly, Ngarlgumirdi was less likely to occur in landscapes affected by frequent fires, whereas cats were more common there.

Conclusions

Our findings have highlighted the importance of decreasing fire frequency and increasing the extent of long-unburnt habitats (>3 years) for preserving Ngarlgumirdi on the Dampier Peninsula and mitigating ecological damage inflicted by feral cats. Findings were consistent across spatial scales (1-, 3-, 5- and 10-km radius from each monitoring site).

Implications

These results have demonstrated the potential of fire management to increase native species resilience in the absence of direct feral cat control methods. Further, they support a recent cross-tenure initiative led by Traditional Owners to implement fire management that aims to reduce large, frequent high-severity wildfires and increase areas of long-unburnt vegetation on the Dampier Peninsula.

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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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