The decline of the world's large herbivores, especially in Africa and
parts of Asia, is raising the specter of an "empty landscape" in some
of the most diverse ecosystems on the planet, according to a newly
published study.
Many populations of animals such as rhinoceroses,
zebras, camels, elephants and tapirs are diminishing or threatened with
extinction in grasslands, savannahs, deserts and forests, scientists
say.
An international team of wildlife ecologists led by William
Ripple, Oregon State University distinguished professor in the College
of Forestry, conducted a comprehensive analysis of data on the world's
largest herbivores (more than 100 kilograms, or 220 pounds, on average),
including endangerment status, key threats and ecological consequences
of population decline. They published their observations today in Science Advances, the open-access online journal of Science magazine.
The
authors focused on 74 large herbivore species - animals that subsist on
vegetation - and concluded that "without radical intervention, large
herbivores (and many smaller ones) will continue to disappear from
numerous regions with enormous ecological, social, and economic costs."
Ripple initiated the study after conducting a global analysis of
large-carnivore decline, which goes hand-in-hand, he said, with the loss
of their herbivore prey.
"I expected that habitat change would be
the main factor causing the endangerment of large herbivores," Ripple
said. "But surprisingly, the results show that the two main factors in
herbivore declines are hunting by humans and habitat change. They are
twin threats."
The scientists refer to an analysis of the decline
of animals in tropical forests published in the journal BioScience in
1992. The author, Kent H. Redford, then a post-doctoral researcher at
the University of Florida, first used the term "empty forest." While
soaring trees and other vegetation may exist, he wrote, the loss of
forest fauna posed a long-term threat to those ecosystems.
Ripple
and his colleagues went a step further. "Our analysis shows that it goes
well beyond forest landscapes," he said, "to savannahs and grasslands
and deserts. So we coin a new term, the empty landscape." As a group,
terrestrial herbivores encompass about 4,000 known species and live in
many types of ecosystems on every continent except Antarctica.
The
highest numbers of threatened large herbivores live in developing
countries, especially Southeast Asia, India and Africa, the scientists
report. Only one endangered large herbivore lives in Europe (the
European bison), and none are in North America, which, the authors add,
has "already lost most of its large mammals" through prehistoric hunting
and habitat changes.
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