Date:
February 17, 2015
Source:
University of Sydney
Summary:
Sturt National Park in
Australia is the ideal site to test whether dingoes can play a role in
restoring biodiversity and degraded rangelands. The future survival of
large carnivores depends on our understanding of their role, researchers
say.
Credit: Bob Tamayo
Allowing dingoes to return to Sturt National Park in NSW and researching the results may be the key to managing the future of dingoes and many threatened native mammals, University of Sydney researchers believe.
"Our approach is purposefully bold because only an experiment on this
scale can resolve the long-running debate over whether the dingo can
help halt Australia's biodiversity collapse and restore degraded
rangeland environments," said Dr Thomas Newsome from the School of
Biological Sciences at the University of Sydney and lead author of an
article published in Restoration Ecology.
Written with Dr Newsome's colleagues from the University of Sydney and other universities in Australia and in America, where he completed a Fulbright Scholarship, the article outlines how the experiment could be undertaken. "Half the world's mammal extinctions over the last two hundred years have occurred in Australia and we are on track for an acceleration of that loss.
This experiment would provide robust data to address an issue of national and international significance," said Dr Newsome. "Our approach is based on dingoes' ability to suppress populations of invasive predators such as red foxes and feral cats that prey on threatened native species. Dingoes can also control numbers of introduced species such as European wild rabbits, feral pigs and goats or native herbivores such as kangaroos, that in high numbers can contribute to rangeland degradation.
"There are major challenges, including convincing livestock producers and local communities to support the experiment, but we currently have almost no understanding of the impact of increased dingo populations over large areas. It took 20 years of debate in America before wolves were reintroduced into Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho -- so let's start having the conversation."
The researchers suggest allowing dingoes to recolonise Sturt National Park in north-western NSW. One strategy to achieve this would be to realign a small section of the 5500 km dingo-proof fence on the northern and western sides of Sturt National Park and then rebuild it on the southern and eastern sides of the park. This would effectively place Sturt National Park on the northern side of the dingo-fence and allow dingoes to naturally recolonise from South Australia and Queensland where dingoes are more common.
NSW law currently requires the control of dingoes in Sturt National Park so that would have to change to allow the experiment to proceed. The park would be monitored before the realignment of the fence took place, to establish existing conditions. Afterwards the sites where dingoes naturally recolonise within the park would be compared to multiple sites outside the park without dingo populations. "Large carnivores such as wolves, bears, lynx and wolverines are returning in many parts of the world, especially North America and Europe. The future survival of large carnivores will depend on our understanding of their potential to increase biodiversity, local tourism and the health and productivity of ecosystems," said Dr Newsome. "Just one possibility is that if dingo recolonisation to Sturt National Park successfully lowered numbers of feral cats and red foxes we could test whether this assists the reintroduction of locally extinct native mammals such as the greater bilby and burrowing bettong."
The researchers also suggest it would be worthwhile considering reintroduction or recolonisation studies elsewhere, such as sites south of the dingo proof fence in South Australia.
Written with Dr Newsome's colleagues from the University of Sydney and other universities in Australia and in America, where he completed a Fulbright Scholarship, the article outlines how the experiment could be undertaken. "Half the world's mammal extinctions over the last two hundred years have occurred in Australia and we are on track for an acceleration of that loss.
This experiment would provide robust data to address an issue of national and international significance," said Dr Newsome. "Our approach is based on dingoes' ability to suppress populations of invasive predators such as red foxes and feral cats that prey on threatened native species. Dingoes can also control numbers of introduced species such as European wild rabbits, feral pigs and goats or native herbivores such as kangaroos, that in high numbers can contribute to rangeland degradation.
"There are major challenges, including convincing livestock producers and local communities to support the experiment, but we currently have almost no understanding of the impact of increased dingo populations over large areas. It took 20 years of debate in America before wolves were reintroduced into Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho -- so let's start having the conversation."
The researchers suggest allowing dingoes to recolonise Sturt National Park in north-western NSW. One strategy to achieve this would be to realign a small section of the 5500 km dingo-proof fence on the northern and western sides of Sturt National Park and then rebuild it on the southern and eastern sides of the park. This would effectively place Sturt National Park on the northern side of the dingo-fence and allow dingoes to naturally recolonise from South Australia and Queensland where dingoes are more common.
NSW law currently requires the control of dingoes in Sturt National Park so that would have to change to allow the experiment to proceed. The park would be monitored before the realignment of the fence took place, to establish existing conditions. Afterwards the sites where dingoes naturally recolonise within the park would be compared to multiple sites outside the park without dingo populations. "Large carnivores such as wolves, bears, lynx and wolverines are returning in many parts of the world, especially North America and Europe. The future survival of large carnivores will depend on our understanding of their potential to increase biodiversity, local tourism and the health and productivity of ecosystems," said Dr Newsome. "Just one possibility is that if dingo recolonisation to Sturt National Park successfully lowered numbers of feral cats and red foxes we could test whether this assists the reintroduction of locally extinct native mammals such as the greater bilby and burrowing bettong."
The researchers also suggest it would be worthwhile considering reintroduction or recolonisation studies elsewhere, such as sites south of the dingo proof fence in South Australia.
Story Source:
The above story is based on materials provided by University of Sydney. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
The above story is based on materials provided by University of Sydney. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal Reference:
Cite This Page:- Thomas M. Newsome, Guy-Anthony Ballard, Mathew S. Crowther, Justin A. Dellinger, Peter J. S. Fleming, Alistair S. Glen, Aaron C. Greenville, Chris N. Johnson, Mike Letnic, Katherine E. Moseby, Dale G. Nimmo, Michael Paul Nelson, John L. Read, William J. Ripple, Euan G. Ritchie, Carolyn R. Shores, Arian D. Wallach, Aaron J. Wirsing, Christopher R. Dickman. Resolving the value of the dingo in ecological restoration. Restoration Ecology, 2015; DOI: 10.1111/rec.12186
University
of Sydney. "Time for a bold dingo experiment, researchers say."
ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 17 February 2015.
<www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/02/150217122712.htm>.
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