Densities of Ecological Replacement Herbivores Required to Restore Plant Communities: A Case Study of Giant Tortoises on Pinta Island, Galapagos
Authored by Elizabeth A Hunter, James P Gibbs
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1111/rec.12055
Sponsors:
Galapagos Conservancy
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Model Code URLs:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/store/10.1111/rec.12055/asset/supinfo/rec12055-sup-0003-AppendixS3.pdf?v=1&s=31c8f8fa1b34b80d0fa47b6257ce1dbde16d56a3
Abstract
Loss of native herbivores and introduction of livestock in many arid and
semi-arid ecosystems around the world has shifted the competitive
balance from herbaceous to woody plants, leading to biodiversity loss, reduced plant productivity, and soil erosion. To restore functions of
these ecosystems, ecological replacements have been proposed as
substitutes for extinct native herbivores. Here we predict how an
ecological replacement giant tortoise population (Chelonoidis spp.)
would interact with woody plants on Pinta Island in the Galapagos
Archipelago, where a small group of replacement tortoises was introduced
in 2010 to initiate restoration of the island's plant community. We
developed an individual-based, spatially explicit simulation model that
incorporated field-derived tortoise behavior and tortoise-plant
interaction data to test whether tortoise introductions could lead to
broad-scale changes in the plant community and, if so, at what tortoise
densities. Tortoises reduced vegetation density in most (81\%)
50-year-long simulations if the tortoise density was at least 0.7 per
hectare, a value well below typical densities. In a smaller proportion
of simulations (30\%), tortoises increased local vegetation patchiness.
Our results suggest that even moderate-density tortoise populations can
reverse woody plant encroachment. Deployment of ecological replacement
giant tortoises may therefore be a viable approach for restoring other
arid and semi-arid ecosystems where a native herbivore that previously
had strong interactions with the plant community has gone extinct.
Tags
Dynamics
ecosystems
Conservation
Savanna
Grasslands
Protocol
Grazing systems
21st-century
Vegetation
Engineers