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评估利用龟类生态替代品恢复历史放牧生态系统的潜力。

Assessing the potential to restore historic grazing ecosystems with tortoise ecological replacements.

机构信息

School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1UG, England.

出版信息

Conserv Biol. 2013 Aug;27(4):690-700. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12087. Epub 2013 Jun 14.

Abstract

The extinction of large herbivores, often keystone species, can dramatically modify plant communities and impose key biotic thresholds that may prevent an ecosystem returning to its previous state and threaten native biodiversity. A potentially innovative, yet controversial, landscape-based long-term restoration approach is to replace missing plant-herbivore interactions with non-native herbivores. Aldabran giant (Aldabrachelys gigantea) and Madagascan radiated (Astrochelys radiata) tortoises, taxonomically and functionally similar to the extinct Mauritian giant tortoises (Cylindraspis spp.), were introduced to Round Island, Mauritius, in 2007 to control the non-native plants that were threatening persistence of native species. We monitored the response of the plant community to tortoise grazing for 11 months in enclosures before the tortoises were released and, compared the cost of using tortoises as weeders with the cost of using manual labor. At the end of this period, plant biomass; vegetation height and cover; and adult, seedling, flower, and seed abundance were 3-136 times greater in adjacent control plots than in the tortoise enclosures. After their release, the free-roaming tortoises grazed on most non-native plants and significantly reduced vegetation cover, height, and seed production, reflecting findings from the enclosure study. The tortoises generally did not eat native species, although they consumed those native species that increased in abundance following the eradication of mammalian herbivores. Our results suggest that introduced non-native tortoises are a more cost-effective approach to control non-native vegetation than manual weeding. Numerous long-term outcomes (e.g., change in species composition and soil seed bank) are possible following tortoise releases. Monitoring and adaptive management are needed to ensure that the replacement herbivores promote the recovery of native plants.

摘要

大型食草动物(通常是关键物种)的灭绝会极大地改变植物群落,并施加关键的生物阈值,从而可能阻止生态系统恢复到以前的状态,并威胁到本地生物多样性。一种潜在的创新但有争议的基于景观的长期恢复方法是用非本地食草动物替代缺失的植物-食草动物相互作用。2007 年,为了控制威胁本地物种生存的非本地植物,Aldabran 巨龟(Aldabrachelys gigantea)和马达加斯加辐射龟(Astrochelys radiata)被引入毛里求斯的罗德里格岛,这些龟在分类学和功能上与已灭绝的毛里求斯巨龟(Cylindraspis spp.)相似。在将龟释放之前,我们在围栏内监测了 11 个月植物群落对龟类放牧的反应,并将使用龟类作为除草机的成本与使用人工劳动力的成本进行了比较。在这段时间结束时,相邻对照小区的植物生物量、植被高度和盖度以及成年、幼苗、花和种子的丰度比龟围栏内高 3-136 倍。在释放后,自由漫游的龟类以大多数非本地植物为食,并显著降低了植被覆盖度、高度和种子产量,这反映了围栏研究的结果。这些龟类通常不吃本地物种,尽管它们会吃那些在消灭了食草哺乳动物后数量增加的本地物种。我们的研究结果表明,引入的非本地龟类是一种比人工除草更具成本效益的控制非本地植被的方法。在龟类释放后,可能会出现许多长期结果(例如,物种组成和土壤种子库的变化)。需要进行监测和适应性管理,以确保替代食草动物能促进本地植物的恢复。

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