Author:
Bridle K. L.,Kirkpatrick J. B.
Abstract
Some species and genera of tall herbs that are widespread both in Tasmanian
and in mainland Australian alpine vegetation are dominant or codominant over
large areas in the Australian Alps, while being typically subordinate species
in Tasmania. This difference has been attributed to the impact of vertebrate
herbivores, which are abundant in the Tasmanian high country but rare in or
absent from the higher altitudes in the Australian Alps. The present study
tests the hypothesis that lack of dominance (>50% cover) of tall
alpine herbs in Tasmanian alpine and subalpine areas could be at least
partially caused by grazing of their reproductive parts. Both in experimental
plots and a clipping experiment, tall herbs produced more flowering stems
under lower grazing/clipping pressure. In the field, the greatest
reduction in flowering occurred under a grazing regime of sheep plus rabbits
plus native herbivores. There was no consistent difference in the number of
flowering stems between rabbit-grazed and rabbit plus native-grazed areas.
However, there was a significant negative relationship between the number of
flower heads and wallaby scats and a non-significant positive relationship
between the number of flower heads and rabbit scats, suggesting that
wallabies, not rabbits, were largely responsible for flower head depletion.
Many species had more flowering stems in rabbit plus native vertebrate-grazed
areas than in ungrazed exclosures. Therefore, it seems possible that the
effects of vertebrate herbivory on flowering may have contributed to the lack
of tall alpine herbfields in Tasmania.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
15 articles.
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