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Journal ArticleDOI

Eruption of ungulate populations, with emphasis on himalayan thar in new zealand

Graeme Caughley
- 01 Jan 1970 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 1, pp 53-72
TLDR
In this article, the authors studied the behavior of a goat-like bovid after liberation in New Zealand and determined trend of demographic stastistics across an eruptive fluctuation that spans 50 years, finding that the major influence on rate of increase was traced to variation in death rate.
Abstract
An eruptive fluctuation is defined operationally as an increase in numbers over at least two generations, followed by a marked decline. Reported eruptions in ungulates suggest that the upswing is initiated by a change in food or habitat and is terminated by over- grazing. An apparent exception-the Kaibab eruption-probably also fits this pattern. The interpretation causally linking reduction of predators on the plateau with increase of deer is an overstatement of evidence. Eruption of established populations is essentially the same process as the buildup of populations initiated by liberation, with the difference that in the second case a zone of high density migrates radially from the point of liberation. Eruption of thar (a goat-like bovid) after liberation in New Zealand was studied by sam- pling populations at different distances from the point of liberation. The aim was to determine trend of demographic stastistics across an eruptive fluctuation that spans 50 years. Although fecundity varied across the eruption, the major influence on rate of increase was traced to variation in death rate. The major component of this variation was the rate of mortality over the first year of life. Trend in death rate, and hence in rate of increase, was associated with trends in other population statistics that are easier to measure. The most useful corre- lative of rate of increase is probably the level of fat reserves. While we do not know whether trends in population statistics of thar reflect those of other ungulates during an eruptive fluctuation, the generality of the reported trends may usefully serve as a testable hypothesis.

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Citations
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Seaweeds: Their Productivity and Strategy for Growth: The role of large marine algae in coastal productivity is far more important than has been suspected.

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The importance of a relative shortage of food in animal ecology

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Biodiversity and ecosystem function: the consumer connection

J. Emmett Duffy
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TL;DR: Evaluating impacts of biodiversity loss on ecosystem function requires expanding the scope of current experimental research to multi-level food webs and understanding the distribution of interaction strengths within natural communities and how they change with community composition.
References
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Book

Fundamentals of ecology

TL;DR: This book discusses the role of energy in Ecological Systems, its role in ecosystem development, and its implications for future generations of ecologists.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Natural Regulation of Animal Numbers

Journal Article

The natural regulation of animal numbers

S. A. Barnett
- 01 Jul 1955 - 
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