Interactions among threats affect conservation management outcomes: Livestock grazing removes the benefits of fire management for small mammals in Australian tropical savannas

Conservation scientists and practitioners usually focus on understanding and managing individual threats to biodiversity. However, threats may interact, making management outcomes unpredictable. Here, we investigated whether interactions between fire regimes and introduced livestock affect the conse...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inConservation science and practice Vol. 1; no. 7
Main Authors Legge, Sarah, Smith, James G., James, Alex, Tuft, Katherine D., Webb, Terry, Woinarski, John C. Z.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Chichester, UK John Wiley & Sons, Ltd 01.07.2019
John Wiley & Sons, Inc
Wiley
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Summary:Conservation scientists and practitioners usually focus on understanding and managing individual threats to biodiversity. However, threats may interact, making management outcomes unpredictable. Here, we investigated whether interactions between fire regimes and introduced livestock affect the conservation goal of population recovery for small mammals in Australia's tropical savannas, using a long‐term and landscape‐scale study. Mammal richness and abundance increased as management reduced the average annual fire extent and frequency at large and medium scales. However, these relationships between fire and richness and abundance were only evident in areas where introduced livestock were removed. This interaction may arise because predation by feral cats is amplified in areas with reduced vegetation ground cover, and cover is reduced over longer periods when livestock have access to burnt areas, because they selectively graze regenerating grass. Fire management for conservation receives substantial investment across northern Australia, and in savannas worldwide; this study shows that without appropriate management of other factors, this investment may be ineffective. More broadly, managing single threats to biodiversity may be compromised if interactions between threats are not explicitly considered. This study provides an example of how such interactions can be evaluated for improved biodiversity conservation.
Bibliography:Funding information
Australian Wildlife Conservancy; Australian Government: Caring For Our Country, National Environmental Research Program, National Environmental Science Program Threatened Species Recovery Hub; Western Australian Government Kimberley Science and Conservation Strategy; The Nature Conservancy's David Thomas Challenge
ISSN:2578-4854
2578-4854
DOI:10.1111/csp2.52