Abstract

Australia has experienced dramatic declines and extinctions of its native rodent species over the last 200 years, particularly in southern Australia. In the tropical savanna of northern Australia significant declines have occurred only in recent decades. The later onset of these declines suggests that the causes may differ from earlier declines in the south. We examine potential regional effects (northern versus southern Australia) on biological and ecological correlates of range decline in Australian rodents. We demonstrate that rodent declines have been greater in the south than in the tropical north, are strongly influenced by phylogeny, and are consistently greater for species inhabiting relatively open or sparsely vegetated habitat. Unlike in marsupials, where some species have much larger body size than rodents, body mass was not an important predictor of decline in rodents. All Australian rodent species are within the prey-size range of cats (throughout the continent) and red foxes (in the south). Contrary to the hypothesis that mammal declines are related directly to ecosystem productivity (annual rainfall), our results are consistent with the hypothesis that disturbances such as fire and grazing, which occur in non-rainforest habitats and remove cover used by rodents for shelter, nesting and foraging, increase predation risk. We agree with calls to introduce conservation management that limits the size and intensity of fires, increases fire patchiness and reduces grazing impacts at ecological scales appropriate for rodents. Controlling feral predators, even creating predator-free reserves in relatively sparsely-vegetated habitats, is urgently required to ensure the survival of rodent species, particularly in northern Australia where declines are not yet as severe as those in the south.

Highlights

  • The global mammal fauna is declining rapidly [1]

  • We examine potential regional effects on biological and ecological correlates of range decline in Australian rodents

  • Eightyeight percent (n = 28 species) of conilurine rodent species in southern Australia have declined to some extent, and 37% (n = 7 species) have declined in northern Australia

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The global mammal fauna is declining rapidly [1]. In Australia, many rodent species have gone extinct (10 species) or declined significantly in distribution and abundance (18 species) since European settlement (in 1788), in the semi-arid and arid regions of central and southern Australia (Eremaean bioprovince) [2] and the Mediterranean zone of southern Australia [3, 4]. In Australia the conilurine rodents comprise 49 species (of 62 rodent species in Australia) and seven endemic genera [15] This group warrants special conservation attention because it has undergone exceptional declines: 35 species are in decline and eight species on continental Australia are extinct, representing ~4% of global rodent declines and extinctions [4, 16]. Eightyeight percent (n = 28 species) of conilurine rodent species in southern Australia have declined to some extent, and 37% (n = 7 species) have declined in northern Australia The decline of this group in Australia is one of the worst proportional fauna losses anywhere, comparable to the loss of Singapore forest endemics [17], Lake Victoria cichlids [18], Guam birds [19], neotropical cloud forest frogs [20] and French Polynesian Partulid snails [21]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call