Coarse woody debris can reduce mammalian browsing damage of woody plant saplings in box-gum grassy woodlands
Date
Authors
Stapleton, Joseph
Stagoll (Ikin), Karen
Freudenberger, David
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
The critically endangered box-gum grassy woodlands of south-east
Australia face numerous threats including the failure of woody plant regeneration caused
by over-browsing. In the Australian Capital Territory, over-browsing of tree and shrub saplings
is likely caused by dense populations of Eastern Grey Kangaroo (Macropus giganteus)
found in many nature reserves free of livestock. One possible way to protect these saplings
is using coarse woody debris (CWD) as a browsing deterrent. We tested this idea by planting
palatable Red Stemmed Wattle (Acacia rubida) saplings among manually applied CWD,
among naturally fallen CWD, and in the open, in five woodland reserves. We recorded the
proportion of saplings browsed, the number of weeks to first browsing and the browsing
severity (sapling height lost). Applied CWD protected saplings from being browsed only
at relatively low-to-moderate kangaroo browsing pressure (as measured by faecal pellet
counts). At relatively high browsing pressure, the probability of a sapling being browsed
among applied CWD was 100%, similar to the probability in the open treatment (no
CWD). Natural CWD, in contrast, provided some protection even at high browsing pressures.
Time to browsing was most affected by browsing pressure, although CWD cover also
had an influence. Browsing severity was similar between the three treatments and was only
affected by browsing pressure. These results indicate that without protection, palatable
woody plant saplings have a high chance of being browsed by kangaroos in woodland
reserves, and therefore, some protection is needed for successful regeneration. The
CWD being applied to reserves has a limited capacity to protect regenerating saplings. If
more protection is wanted a CWD structure more resembling natural fallen timber should
be used. This could be done by artificially placing branches around plantings. However,
the most important action to facilitate regeneration is to manage kangaroo populations to reduce overall browsing pressure.
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Source
Ecological Management and Restoration
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Book Title
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Restricted until
2099-12-31