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      Changes in the avifauna of Cape York Peninsula over a period of 9 years: the relative effects of fire, vegetation type and climate

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      Emu
      CSIRO Publishing

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          CONFRONTING MULTICOLLINEARITY IN ECOLOGICAL MULTIPLE REGRESSION

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            Sensitivity of predictive species distribution models to change in grain size

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              Rarity of a top predator triggers continent-wide collapse of mammal prey: dingoes and marsupials in Australia.

              Top predators in terrestrial ecosystems may limit populations of smaller predators that could otherwise become over abundant and cause declines and extinctions of some prey. It is therefore possible that top predators indirectly protect many species of prey from excessive predation. This effect has been demonstrated in some small-scale studies, but it is not known how general or important it is in maintaining prey biodiversity. During the last 150 years, Australia has suffered the world's highest rate of mammal decline and extinction, and most evidence points to introduced mid-sized predators (the red fox and the feral cat) as the cause. Here, we test the idea that the decline of Australia's largest native predator, the dingo, played a role in these extinctions. Dingoes were persecuted from the beginning of European settlement in Australia and have been eliminated or made rare over large parts of the continent. We show a strong positive relationship between the survival of marsupials and the geographical overlap with high-density dingo populations. Our results suggest that the rarity of dingoes was a critical factor which allowed smaller predators to overwhelm marsupial prey, triggering extinction over much of the continent. This is evidence of a crucial role of top predators in maintaining prey biodiversity at large scales in terrestrial ecosystems and suggests that many remaining Australian mammals would benefit from the positive management of dingoes.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Emu
                EMU
                CSIRO Publishing
                0158-4197
                2011
                2011
                : 111
                : 2
                : 120
                Article
                10.1071/MU10009
                47083069-6d7d-46d8-ab24-9c301b030d33
                © 2011
                History

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