The (non)effects of lethal population control on the diet of Australian dingoes.

Top-predators contribute to ecosystem resilience, yet individuals or populations are often subject to lethal control to protect livestock, managed game or humans from predation. Such management actions sometimes attract concern that lethal control might affect top-predator function in ways ultimatel...

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Main Authors: Benjamin L Allen, Luke K-P Leung
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4171516?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-26e9e879390d45da916296e96b598f722020-11-25T00:02:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0199e10825110.1371/journal.pone.0108251The (non)effects of lethal population control on the diet of Australian dingoes.Benjamin L AllenLuke K-P LeungTop-predators contribute to ecosystem resilience, yet individuals or populations are often subject to lethal control to protect livestock, managed game or humans from predation. Such management actions sometimes attract concern that lethal control might affect top-predator function in ways ultimately detrimental to biodiversity conservation. The primary function of a predator is predation, which is often investigated by assessing their diet. We therefore use data on prey remains found in 4,298 Australian dingo scats systematically collected from three arid sites over a four year period to experimentally assess the effects of repeated broad-scale poison-baiting programs on dingo diet. Indices of dingo dietary diversity and similarity were either identical or near-identical in baited and adjacent unbaited treatment areas in each case, demonstrating no control-induced change to dingo diets. Associated studies on dingoes' movement behaviour and interactions with sympatric mesopredators were similarly unaffected by poison-baiting. These results indicate that mid-sized top-predators with flexible and generalist diets (such as dingoes) may be resilient to ongoing and moderate levels of population control without substantial alteration of their diets and other related aspects of their ecological function.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4171516?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benjamin L Allen
Luke K-P Leung
spellingShingle Benjamin L Allen
Luke K-P Leung
The (non)effects of lethal population control on the diet of Australian dingoes.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Benjamin L Allen
Luke K-P Leung
author_sort Benjamin L Allen
title The (non)effects of lethal population control on the diet of Australian dingoes.
title_short The (non)effects of lethal population control on the diet of Australian dingoes.
title_full The (non)effects of lethal population control on the diet of Australian dingoes.
title_fullStr The (non)effects of lethal population control on the diet of Australian dingoes.
title_full_unstemmed The (non)effects of lethal population control on the diet of Australian dingoes.
title_sort (non)effects of lethal population control on the diet of australian dingoes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Top-predators contribute to ecosystem resilience, yet individuals or populations are often subject to lethal control to protect livestock, managed game or humans from predation. Such management actions sometimes attract concern that lethal control might affect top-predator function in ways ultimately detrimental to biodiversity conservation. The primary function of a predator is predation, which is often investigated by assessing their diet. We therefore use data on prey remains found in 4,298 Australian dingo scats systematically collected from three arid sites over a four year period to experimentally assess the effects of repeated broad-scale poison-baiting programs on dingo diet. Indices of dingo dietary diversity and similarity were either identical or near-identical in baited and adjacent unbaited treatment areas in each case, demonstrating no control-induced change to dingo diets. Associated studies on dingoes' movement behaviour and interactions with sympatric mesopredators were similarly unaffected by poison-baiting. These results indicate that mid-sized top-predators with flexible and generalist diets (such as dingoes) may be resilient to ongoing and moderate levels of population control without substantial alteration of their diets and other related aspects of their ecological function.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4171516?pdf=render
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