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Habitat preference of the striped legless lizard: Implications of grazing by native herbivores and livestock for conservation of grassland biota
Author(s) -
Howland Brett W. A.,
Stojanovic Dejan,
Gordon Iain J.,
Fletcher Don,
Snape Melissa,
Stirnemann Ingrid A.,
Lindenmayer David B.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
austral ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.688
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1442-9993
pISSN - 1442-9985
DOI - 10.1111/aec.12337
Subject(s) - grazing , grassland , threatened species , herbivore , ecology , habitat , grazing pressure , conservation grazing , extinction (optical mineralogy) , fauna , biology , agroforestry , paleontology
Across the globe, many species of reptile are threatened with extinction, with changes in grazing pressure as a significant factor in their decline. Few studies have investigated the role of native herbivores, yet studying natural grazers may provide insight into natural grazing regimes, not apparent in studies of domestic livestock. In this study, we investigate the habitat requirements of a threatened Australian grassland reptile, the striped legless lizard, Delma impar , in grasslands grazed by a native herbivore, the eastern grey kangaroo Macropus giganteus . Delma impar appears sensitive to habitat change resulting from altered grazing intensity, but a lack of information hinders implementation of appropriate grazing regimes. To address this gap, we investigated habitat preferences of D .  impar at multiple spatial scales across a grazing gradient. We found that the occurrence of D .  impar was not affected by the size of grassland remnants, but was negatively related to the density of native grazers. This result was likely a consequence of the negative effect of high grazing intensity on grass structural complexity, as the probability of encountering a D .  impar was positively related to grass structural complexity at the fine scale (1 m 2 ). We recommend that conservation efforts should avoid high intensity grazing (equivalent to > 1.3 kangaroos/ha), yet ensure enough grazing disturbance is maintained to promote the formation of complex grass structures. We also recommend that small floristically degraded and fragmented grassland habitat should be included in conservation efforts. These recommendations will likely benefit a number of faunal species in grasslands grazed by domestic and native grazers. Importantly, our data highlight the need for managing grazing regimes, even in environments dominated by native herbivores.

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