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Large predators and trophic cascades in terrestrial ecosystems of the western United States

机译:美国西部陆地生态系统中的大型掠食者和营养级联

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Large predators potentially can help shape the structure and functioning of terrestrial ecosystems, yet strong evidence of top-down herbivore limitation has not been widely reported in the scientific literature. Herein we synthesize outcomes of recent tri-trophic cascades studies involving the presence and absence of large predators for five national parks in the western United States, including Olympic, Yosemite, Yellowstone, Zion, and Wind Cave. Historical observations by park biologists regarding woody browse species and recently compiled age structure data for deciduous trees indicate major impacts to woody plant communities by ungulates following the extirpation or displacement of large predators. Declines in long-term tree recruitment indexed additional effects to plant communities and ecological processes, as well as shifts towards alternative ecosystem states. The magnitude and consistency of vegetation impacts found within these five parks, in conjunction with other recent North American studies, indicate that broad changes to ecosystem processes and the lower trophic level may have occurred in other parts of the western United States where large predators have been extirpated or displaced. Thus, where ungulates have significantly altered native plant communities in the absence of large predators, restoration of native flora is urgently needed to recover former ecosystem services. Following the reintroduction of previously extirpated gray wolves Canis lupus into Yellowstone National Park, a spatially patchy recovery of woody browse species (e.g., aspen Populus tremuloides, willow Salix spp., cottonwood Populus spp.) has begun, indicating that large predator recovery may represent an important restoration strategy for ecosystems degraded by wild ungulates.
机译:大型捕食者可能有助于塑造陆地生态系统,但自上而下的食草动物局限性的有力证据尚未在科学文献中得到广泛报道。在这里,我们综合了最近的三营养级联研究的结果,这些研究涉及美国西部五个国家公园(包括奥林匹克公园,优胜美地,黄石公园,锡安河和风洞)是否存在大型掠食性动物。公园生物学家对木质浏览物种的历史观察以及最近收集的落叶树年龄结构数据表明,有蹄类动物在大型食肉动物的灭绝或迁徙后,有蹄类动物对木本植物群落产生了重大影响。长期树木采伐量的下降表明对植物群落和生态过程的附加影响,以及向其他生态系统状态的转变。在这五个公园内发现的植被影响的大小和一致性,以及最近在北美进行的其他研究表明,在美国西部其他地方存在大型食肉动物的地区,可能已经发生了生态系统过程的广泛变化和较低的营养水平。灭绝或流离失所。因此,在没有大型捕食者的情况下,有蹄类动物极大地改变了原生植物群落,因此迫切需要恢复原生植物以恢复以前的生态系统服务。在将先前已灭绝的灰狼犬狼重新引入黄石国家公园后,木质浏览物种(例如,白杨杨,杨柳,杨木,杨木)的空间斑片性恢复已经开始,这表明大的捕食者恢复可能代表野生有蹄类动物退化的生态系统的重要恢复策略。

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