Abstract
Abstract Twenty-three reserves in the Western Australian wheatbelt were examined in an attempt to assess their conservation value for native mammals, excluding bats. Multiple regression analysis on log transformed data showed that 72% of the observed variation in mammal species richness between reserves was accounted for by reserve size. The addition of the other reserve variables examined did not increase significantly this explained variation, although significant correlations existed with most variables. Estimates suggest that a minimum reserve area of about 40,000 ha is required to conserve that part of the regional assemblage of mammals in southern and western Australia likely to persist in the face of moderate disturbances by man and his agencies. Reserves should have large areas of major vegetation formations and maximise the number of regional vegetation associations. Nature reserves as small as 30 ha are valuable sanctuaries for certain species of native mammals. Comparison with mammal faunas isolated on islands by Quaternary glacioeustatic sea-level rise shows that in relation to area, wheatbelt reserves are richer in species, but the slopes of the regressions are similar, particularly for those islands that are little disturbed by man and introduced predators. We suggest that most of the species of mammals surviving in the wheatbelt are suited to existing within patches of vegetation, such as nature reserves, because they are adapted to surviving within the natural archipelago of soil and vegetation types which characterise the wheatbelt and southwestern Western Australia. We suggest that the species of mammals that have become extinct in the wheatbelt are those that are unable to cope with alteration in environmental patchiness caused by changes in the pattern of fires resulting from European occupation.
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