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Disentangling, again, the drivers of population decline for two harvested species: a response to Prasad et al . ([Prasad, S., 2014])
Author(s) -
Ticktin Tamara,
Ganesan Rengaian,
Paramesha Mallegowda,
Setty Siddappa
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of applied ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.503
H-Index - 181
eISSN - 1365-2664
pISSN - 0021-8901
DOI - 10.1111/1365-2664.12249
Subject(s) - phyllanthus emblica , shrub , prasad , population , biology , invasive species , ecology , toxicology , demography , traditional medicine , medicine , philosophy , theology , sociology
Summary Ticktin et al . (2012) ( Journal of Applied Ecology , 49 , 774) assessed the dynamics of two Indian tree species ( Phyllanthus emblica and P. indofischeri ) and showed that although fruit harvest can decrease long‐term population growth rates (λ), the principal drivers of decline are mistletoe infestation and invasion of an exotic shrub. Prasad et al . (2014) ( Journal of Applied Ecology , 51 , doi: 10.1111/1365‐2664.12170) questioned Ticktin et al .'s approach, showed that P. emblica λ values increased when fruit harvest was banned and concluded that fruit harvest has a significant negative effect. We demonstrate that Prasad et al .'s analysis is fundamentally flawed and that our conclusions hold firm. We clarify that our models are built from empirical data collected from field plots. We use life table response experiments to demonstrate that the increase in P. emblica λs after the fruit harvest ban is due to higher adult survival and unrelated to fruit harvest. P. indofischeri populations show no such increase. We demonstrate that our results and the literature strongly back up our management recommendations to control mistletoe and the invasive shrub, and protect amla saplings. Synthesis and applications . Prasad et al . (2014) confound the effects of time and treatment and therefore reach erroneous conclusions. This highlights the importance of careful analyses to disentangle the effects of multiple drivers of decline for species at risk.

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