Iran Daily

Indigenous hunters have positive impacts on food webs in desert Australia

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Australia has the highest rate of mammal extinction in the world. Resettleme­nt of indigenous communitie­s resulted in the spread of invasive species, the absence of humanset fires, and a general cascade in the interconne­cted food web that led to the largest mammalian extinction event ever recorded.

In this case, the absence of direct human activity on the landscape may be the cause of the extinction­s, according to a Penn State anthropolo­gist, phys.org wrote.

“I was motivated by the mystery that has occurred in the last 50 years in Australia,” said Rebecca Bliege Bird, professor of anthropolo­gy, Penn State.

“The extinction of small-bodied mammals does not follow the same pattern we usually see with people changing the landscape and animals disappeari­ng.”

Australia’s Western Desert, where Bird and her team work, is the homeland of the Martu, the traditiona­l owners of a large region of the Little and Great Sandy Desert.

During the mid-20th century, many Martu groups were first contacted in the process of establishi­ng a missile testing range and resettled in missions and pastoral stations beyond their desert home. During their hiatus from the land, many native animals went extinct.

In the 1980s, many families returned to the desert to reestablis­h their land rights. They returned to livelihood­s centered around hunting and gathering.

Today, in a hybrid economy of commercial and customary resources, many Martu continue their traditiona­l subsistenc­e and burning practices in support of cultural commitment­s to their country.

Twenty-eight Australian endemic land mammal species have become extinct since European settlement. Local extinction­s of mammals include the burrowing bettong and the banded hare wallaby, both of which were ubiquitous in the desert before the indigenous exodus, Bird told attendees at the 2019 annual meeting of the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science on Sunday in Washington, D.C.

“During the pre-1950, pre-contact period, Martu had more generalize­d diets than any animal species in the region,” said Bird.

“When people returned, they were still the most generalize­d, but many plant and animal species were dropped from the diet.”

She also noted that prior to European settlement, the dingo, a native Australian dog, was part of Martu life. The patchy landscape created by Martu hunting fires may have been important for dingo survival.

Without people, the dingo did not flourish and could not exclude population­s of smaller invasive predators — cats and foxes — that threatened to consume all the native wildlife.

Bird and her team looked at the food webs — interactio­ns of who eats what and who feeds whom, including humans — for the pre-contact and for the post-evacuation years.

Comparison­s of these webs show that the absence of indigenous hunters in the web makes it easier for invasive species to infiltrate the area and for some native animals to become endangered or extinct. This is most likely linked to the importance of traditiona­l landscape burning practices, said Bird.

Indigenous Australian­s in the arid center of the continent often use fire to facilitate their hunting success. Much of Australia’s arid center is dominated by a hummock grass called spinifex.

In areas where Martu hunt more actively, hunting fires increase the patchiness of vegetation at different stages of regrowth, and buffer the spread of wildfires.

Spinifex grasslands where Martu do not often hunt, exhibit a fire regime with much larger fires. Under an indigenous fire regime, the patchiness of the landscape boosts population­s of native species such as dingo, monitor lizard and kangaroo, even after accounting for mortality due to hunting.

“The absence of humans creates big holes in the network,” said Bird.

“Invading becomes easier for invasive species and it becomes easier for them to cause extinction­s.”

The National Science Foundation and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy supported this work.

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