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      The Madingley General Ecosystem Model predicts bushmeat yields, species extinction rates and ecosystem-level impacts of bushmeat harvesting

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      bioRxiv
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          Abstract

          Traditional approaches to guiding decisions about harvesting bushmeat often employ single-species population dynamic models, which require species- and location-specific data, are missing ecological processes such as multi-trophic interactions, cannot represent multi-species harvesting, and cannot predict the broader ecosystem impacts of harvesting. In order to explore an alternative approach to devising sustainable harvesting strategies, we employ the Madingley General Ecosystem Model, which can simulate ecosystem dynamics in response to multi-species harvesting given nothing other than location-specific climate data. We used the model to examine yield, extinctions, and broader ecosystem impacts, for a range of harvesting intensities of duiker-sized ectothermic herbivores. Duiker antelope (such as Cephalophus callipygus and Cephalophus dorsalis) are the most heavily hunted species in sub-Saharan Africa, contributing 34%-95% of all bushmeat in the Congo Basin. Across a range of harvesting rates, the Madingley model gave estimates for optimal harvesting rate, and extinction rate, that were qualitatively and quantitatively similar to the estimates from single-species Beverton-Holt model. Predicted yields were somewhat greater (around 5 times, on average) for the Madingley model, which would be expected given that the Madingley simulates multi-species harvesting from an initially pristine ecosystem. This match increased the degree of confidence with which we could examine other predictions from the ecosystem model, as follows. At medium and high levels of harvesting of duiker-sized herbivores, there were statistically significant, but moderate, reductions in the densities of the targeted functional group; increases in small-bodied herbivores; decreases in large-bodied carnivores; and minimal ecosystem-level impacts overall. The results suggest that general ecosystem models such as the Madingley model could be used more widely to help estimate sustainable harvesting rates, bushmeat yields and broader ecosystem impacts across different locations and target species.

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          (View ORCID Profile)
          Journal
          bioRxiv
          March 02 2020
          Article
          10.1101/2020.03.02.959718
          0da76da4-5ee9-4126-b48f-03b2375b3f79
          © 2020
          History

          Entomology,Ecology
          Entomology, Ecology

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