Abstract

Herbivores are major drivers of ecosystem structure, diversity, and function. Resilient ecosystems therefore require viable herbivore populations in a sustainable balance with environmental resource availability. This balance is becoming harder to achieve, with increasingly threatened species reliant on small protected areas in increasingly harsh and unpredictable environments. Arid environments in North Africa exemplify this situation, featuring a biologically distinct species assemblage exposed to extreme and volatile conditions, including habitat loss and climate change‐associated threats. Here, we implement an integrated likelihood approach to relate scimitar‐horned oryx (Oryx dammah) and dorcas gazelle (Gazella dorcas) density, via dung distance sampling, to habitat, predator, and geographic correlates in Dghoumes National Park, Tunisia. We show how two threatened sympatric ungulates partition resources on the habitat axis, exhibiting nonuniform responses to the same vegetation gradient. Scimitar‐horned oryx were positively associated with plant species richness, selecting for vegetated ephemeral watercourses (wadis) dominated by herbaceous cover. Conversely, dorcas gazelle were negatively associated with vegetation density (herbaceous height, litter cover, and herbaceous cover), selecting instead for rocky plains with sparse vegetation. We suggest that adequate plant species richness should be a prerequisite for areas proposed for future ungulate reintroductions in arid and semi‐arid environments. This evidence will inform adaptive management of reintroduced ungulates in protected environments, helping managers and planners design sustainable ecosystems and effective conservation programs.

Highlights

  • Effective conservation management is essential for the dynamic arid regions of the world (Durant et al 2014)

  • Global data from the IUCN Antelope Specialist Group show that 27% of antelope species are threatened with extinction; this rises to 89% when only aridadapted antelope are considered (Mesochina and Cooke 2015)

  • Desertic environments are characterized by low biomass and vegetative cover relative to more mesic systems, with high spatiotemporal variability driven by pulses of resource saturation (Illius and O’Connor 2000; Schwinning and Sala 2004)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Effective conservation management is essential for the dynamic arid regions of the world (Durant et al 2014). Desertic environments are characterized by low biomass and vegetative cover relative to more mesic systems, with high spatiotemporal variability driven by pulses of resource saturation (Illius and O’Connor 2000; Schwinning and Sala 2004). These pulses drive stochastic events, including unpredicted population declines (Illius and O’Connor 2000). Arid ecosystems can provide important insights into extinction risk for dynamic, yet constrained, environments

Methods
Results
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