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Researchers from UNSW say these insights could be used by the conservation managers of arid ecosystems in Australia. Resized Image using AI by SFLORG Photo Credit: Prof. Mike Letnic. |
A reduction in decaying vegetation can have significant impacts on the desert food chain, UNSW scientists have found.
It’s well understood that overgrazing by herbivores like kangaroos can change ecosystems dramatically, but the impact excessive grazing has on the cover of dead vegetation – and cascading effects on small vertebrates like lizards, desert frogs and dunnarts – hasn’t been extensively studied.
Now, scientists at UNSW Sydney have shown that overgrazing can disrupt the desert food webs that exist between dead plant material, termites and animals that rely on termites as their main food source. This latest discovery has important implications for the conservation of biodiversity in arid Australia.
Researchers from the School of Biological, Earth & Environmental Sciences carried out field work in the arid region of South Australia and published their findings in the journal Ecosystems.