Data from: Wildlife differentially affect tree and liana regeneration in a tropical forest: an 18‐yr study of experimental terrestrial defaunation versus artificially abundant herbivores
1. Hunting and land use change modify herbivore abundances and cause cascading effects in natural ecosystems. The outcomes for vegetation depend on changes to specific plant-animal interactions, such as seed dispersal or predation, or physical disturbances. 2. We experimentally manipulated wildlife...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Hunting and land use change modify herbivore abundances and cause
cascading effects in natural ecosystems. The outcomes for vegetation
depend on changes to specific plant-animal interactions, such as seed
dispersal or predation, or physical disturbances. 2. We experimentally
manipulated wildlife populations in a primary lowland forest in Malaysia
over an 18-yr period (1996-2014) to understand how artificially high or
low densities of terrestrial wildlife affects tree and liana regeneration.
Our study site retains a diverse wildlife community and artificially high
densities of native wild pigs (Sus scrofa) that are sustained by
crop-raiding in distant oil palm plantations. We used fencing that
excluded terrestrial animals >1kg to experimentally simulate
conditions in defaunated forests. These two treatments - abnormally high
pig abundances in habitat edges and megafauna loss from hunting -
represent common outcomes in disturbed Southeast Asian forests and are
characteristic of many forests globally. 3. We focus on trees and lianas
because they are the two dominant woody lifeforms in tropical forests and
crucial determinants of forest structure and function. 4. We found that
liana sapling abundances (30-100 cm height) increased by 86% in unfenced
control plots with wildlife but were stable in exclosures. In contrast,
tree abundances did not change in unfenced control plots but increased by
83% in exclosures without wildlife. Evidence of scaring on surviving stems
suggested that these inverted outcomes were driven by selective use of
tree saplings for wild pig nests. Lianas may also have greater tolerance
to wildlife disturbances. By the end of the study, lianas comprised 38% of
all saplings in unfenced controls but just 14% in exclosures. 5. We
conclude that abundant wildlife such as wild pigs may shift understory
woody communities towards lianas while defaunation may shift it towards
trees. These results highlight that ecological cascades from hunting or
land use change can alter plant functional types and reshape to long-term
patterns of forest succession and change. Managing unnatural wild boar
populations may be required to conserve native plant communities in both
their native and exotic ranges, including in South America. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.91ht938 |