4.5 Article

Trophic rewilding revives biotic resistance to shrub invasion

期刊

NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
卷 4, 期 5, 页码 712-+

出版社

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41559-019-1068-y

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资金

  1. National Geographic Young Explorers Grant [9459-14]
  2. US National Science Foundation [IOS-1656527]
  3. Princeton Environmental Institute's Grand Challenges programme
  4. Randall and Mary Hack '69 Award for Water and the Environment
  5. Princeton University's Institutes for African Studies and International and Regional Studies
  6. Greg Carr Foundation
  7. Cameron Schrier Foundation
  8. Sherwood Foundation
  9. Princeton's Innovation Fund for New Ideas in the Natural Sciences

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Trophic rewilding seeks to rehabilitate degraded ecosystems by repopulating them with large animals, thereby re-establishing strong top-down interactions. Yet there are very few tests of whether such initiatives can restore ecosystem structure and functions, and on what timescales. Here we show that war-induced collapse of large-mammal populations in Mozambique's Gorongosa National Park exacerbated woody encroachment by the invasive shrub Mimosa pigra-considered one of the world's 100 worst invasive species-and that one decade of concerted trophic rewilding restored this invasion to pre-war baseline levels. Mimosa occurrence increased between 1972 and 2015, a period encompassing the near extirpation of large herbivores during the Mozambican Civil War. From 2015 to 2019, mimosa abundance declined as ungulate biomass recovered. DNA metabarcoding revealed that ruminant herbivores fed heavily on mimosa, and experimental exclosures confirmed the causal role of mammalian herbivory in containing shrub encroachment. Our results provide mechanistic evidence that trophic rewilding has rapidly revived a key ecosystem function (biotic resistance to a notorious woody invader), underscoring the potential for restoring ecological health in degraded protected areas. The civil war in Mozambique led to the collapse of large-mammal populations and the spread of the invasive plant Mimosa pigra. Experimental exclosures and DNA metabarcoding are used to show how trophic rewilding since the end of the war has reduced the invasive population.

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